Marie de Régnier

(Redirected from Marie de Heredia)

Marie de Régnier (French: [maʁi ʁeɲe]; 20 December 1875 – 6 February 1963), also known by her maiden name Marie de Heredia or her pen-name Gérard d'Houville (French: [ʒeʁaʁ duvil]), was a French novelist and poet, and closely involved in the artistic circles of early twentieth-century Paris.

Marie de Régnier
Marie de Régnier in 1889, photographed by Paul Nadar
Marie de Régnier in 1889, photographed by Paul Nadar
BornMarie-Louise Antoinette de Heredia
(1875-12-20)20 December 1875
Paris
Died6 February 1963(1963-02-06) (aged 87)
Suresnes, France
Pen nameGérard d'Houville
OccupationNovelist, poet
LanguageFrench
NationalityFrench
Notable awardsGrand prix de littérature de l'Académie française, 1918
SpouseHenri de Régnier
RelativesJosé-Maria de Heredia (father)

Biography

edit

Marie de Heredia was the second of three daughters of Cuban-born French poet José-Maria de Heredia, and from an early age she mixed with many writers and artists who came to her father's house, including Leconte de Lisle, Anna de Noailles, Paul Valéry, Pierre Louÿs and Anatole France.[1]

Her private life was somewhat convoluted. She married poet Henri de Régnier, but had a long-term relationship with Pierre Louÿs, who was probably the father of her son Pierre de Régnier (1898–1943). She also took several other lovers, including Edmond Jaloux, Jean-Louis Vaudoyer, Gabriele D'Annunzio (during his exile in Paris from 1910 to 1914), and dramatist Henri Bernstein. Her association with openly lesbian colleagues also led to rumours about her own sexuality.[2]

Works

edit

Though sometimes better known for her liaisons with other artists, Marie de Régnier was a very accomplished poet and novelist in her own right, "considered one of the most gifted of the bevy of women writers that her age produced".[2] Her first attempts at poetry were written at the Bibliothèque de l'Arsenal, where her father was a director. He and his friends encouraged her talents from a very young age,[1] and she eventually began publishing under her married name, later taking the masculine-sounding pseudonym "Gérard d'Houville" (derived from the name of a Norman grandmother, "Louise Gérard d'Houville" or "Girard d'Ouville"[2]). She later said her use of a pen-name was a way of distancing herself from her more famous husband and father,[1] but it was not a serious attempt to disguise her sex: contemporary critics and commentators always referred to "Madame" Gérard d'Houville.

Her work appeared notably in the Revue des deux Mondes from 1894 and was widely admired, with some critics comparing her favourably to Mallarmé. Many of these poems have still not been collected into a modern edition. Her first novel, L'Inconstante, appeared in 1903.

Critical reception and legacy

edit
 
Marie de Régnier posing for her portrait in the workshop of Jacques-Émile Blanche, 1893. Photograph by Giuseppe Primoli.

De Heredia's work was acclaimed throughout her career and she was a popular writer with the public as well as critics. When French newspaper L'Intransigeant asked readers in 1910 to name the top three female writers deserving of a place in the Académie française, "Gérard d'Houville" was placed in top position, above Anna de Noailles and Colette.[3] In 1918 she was the recipient of the Académie française's inaugural Grand Prix de Littérature, awarded for her fiction, and in 1958 she was also given the Académie's Grand Prix de Poésie for her poetic oeuvre – to this day the only woman to have received both awards.[3]

Several artists and painters of the time took her portrait, including Jacques-Émile Blanche and Jean-Louis Forain. She was also the subject of several of Pierre Louÿs's nude photographs.

Select bibliography

edit
  • L'Inconstante, roman, 1903[4]
  • Esclave, 1905
  • Le Temps d'aimer, 1908
  • Le Séducteur, 1914
  • Jeune Fille, 1916
  • Tant pis pour toi, 1921
  • Le Roman des quatre, 1923 (written in collaboration with Paul Bourget, Henri Duvernois and Pierre Benoit)
  • Le Chou, 1924
  • Vingt poèmes, 1925
  • L'Enfant, 1925
  • La Vie amoureuse de l'Impératrice Joséphine, 1925
  • Clowns, 1925
  • Paris et les voyages, 1925
  • Chez le magicien, 1926
  • Proprette et Cochonnet, 1926
  • Opinions candides, 1926
  • Je crois que je vous aime... Sept proverbes, 1927
  • Esclave amoureuse, 1927
  • La Vie amoureuse de la Belle Hélène, 1928
  • Le Diadème de Flore, 1928
  • Le Charmant Rendez-Vous, 1929
  • Les Rêves de Rikiki, 1930
  • Les Poésies, 1931
  • L'Impératrice Joséphine, 1933
  • Peau d'âme, 1935
  • Le Temps d'aimer, 1935
  • Enfantines et Amoureuses, 1946

Further reading

edit
  • Dominique Bona, Les yeux noirs : les vies extraordinaires des sœurs Heredia, J-C. Lattès, 1989
  • Robert Fleury, Marie de Régnier, Plon, 1990
  • Jean-Paul Goujon, Dossier secret : Pierre Louÿs-Marie de Régnier, Paris, Christian Bourgois, 2002
  • Robert Fleury, Marie de Régnier, l'inconstante, Omnibus, 2003
  • Marie de Laubier (dir.), Une muse de la Belle Époque : Marie de Régnier, BNF, 2004 ISBN 271772270X

Film

edit
  • 2019 : Curiosa, an erotic French movie directed by Lou Jeunet.
edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c Tama Lea Engelking, ‘The Secret Rebellion of a Literary Daughter: The Poetry of Gérard d'Houville’, French Literary Series vol. XVI, 1989
  2. ^ a b c Norman R. Shapiro (Ed.), French Women Poets of Nine Centuries, Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008, ISBN 9780801888045
  3. ^ a b Jennifer E. Milligan, The Forgotten Generation: French Women Writers of the Inter-war Period, Berg Publishers 1996, ISBN 1859731139
  4. ^ "Review of L'Inconstante by Gérard d'Houville". The Athenaeum (3940): 560. May 2, 1903.