Content area
Full text
Jacques Demy dreamed of America long before he discovered it in 1965, when Les Parapluies de Cherbourg (1964) was selected for the Oscars. For a long time, America fed his dreams of travel, intrinsically mixed with those of cinema. His reverie goes back to childhood during which he often went to the theater alone and saw "lots of American movies," as he reported in a 1969 interview.1 His precocious "cinephilia" led him to Hollywood, whose studios he avoided, preferring to shoot outdoors in real-life settings around Los Angeles. Nevertheless, America and in particular the musical, a genre linked to the Hollywood studios, nourished his imagination.
His first full-length feature, Lola (1961), opens with a shot of the seashore and a white Cadillac being driven by Michel (Jacques Harden), the lover, who is back from America. This film, originally conceived as a musical, launched the 29-year-old director's career in musical films, a genre that had by then almost completely disappeared in the United States. Strictly speaking, only three of Demy's films can be called musicals: Les Demoiselles de Rochefort (1967), Trois Places pour le 26 (1988), and Peau d'Ane (197 1). The third film which belongs to a different sub-genre, the fairy tale musical, is much closer, as Jean-Pierre Berthomé (243) and Michel Marie (11) note, to the world of Jean Cocteau 's La Belle et la Bête than to the American musical. Thus it is not discussed in this paper. The two films I propose to analyze, Les Demoiselles and Trois Places, belong to what Rick Altman describes as the "show musical" sub -genre, in which Gene Kelly in particular distinguished himself in the postwar years and that was key to the development of the French director's approach. Although the two films came out 21 years apart, Jacques Demy states in an interview that the initial idea for Trois Places emerged during a meeting with Yves Montand in Los Angeles in 1968, only a year after Les Demoiselles. Four years later, a first draft of the script had been completed. Besides belonging to the same sub-genre, the two films where conceived during roughly the same period, that of Les Demoiselles and Demy's sojourn in the United States.
In this paper, I outline the shape Demy's...