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Olympics ceremony shows France as a cultural museum

Last night's Paris Olympics opening ceremony, featuring the Eiffel Tower. Credit: Getty

July 27, 2024 - 10:15am

Paris

Lady Gaga, a New Yorker with no French blood at all, added the first hint of star quality to the official opening of the Paris Olympics. It had long been rumoured that the singer would top the bill at last night’s ambitious ceremony on the River Seine, and there she was, popping her head out of a cluster of pink plumes as the big reveal of an evening otherwise blighted by persistent rain.

Gaga’s French language performance of Mon truc en plumes (“My Feathers Thing”) was entertaining enough, not least because lines such as Tout dans l’coup de reins (“It’s all in the hip thrust”) were so torturously mispronounced. There was also something joyously ridiculous about the way she tried to mimic Zizi Jeanmaire, the real-life Parisienne who made Mon truc famous in the early Sixties when the city was full of innovative young talent of its own.

In this sense, Gaga’s position at an imported highlight of Paris 24 perfectly illustrates a conundrum of modern France: its cultural clichés are all still intact and usable, but they rely on foreigners to sell them. Céline Dion is the Canadian queen of power ballads and it was her — rather than a local — who was chosen to sing Hymne à l’amour, Édith Piaf’s stirring ode to a lost lover.

It’s all part of the Emily in Paris syndrome: the eponymous heroine of the hit TV series doesn’t speak a word of French, and her beret is the wrong colour — red instead of black — yet she has arguably done more to put the city of love and light on the map in recent years than any other living person.

President Emmanuel Macron, ever the disruptive centrist, accepts the dominance of such interlopers, and this is why so many of his fellow citizens detest him. They view the former merchant banker as an ally of the so-called “Anglo-Saxons” — the dreaded globalists whose liberal economics and transnational lifestyles are slowly destroying traditional Frenchness. Macron is notoriously fickle — he is often accused of supporting whichever side he happens to be speaking to — and such an approach prevailed at Thomas Jolly’s Olympic ceremony.

Thus, there were plenty of accordions and can-can girls, but it was household names who would appeal to a billion-strong TV audience of mostly non-French people which dominated. Eurovision song contest kitsch, and multiple woke references to diversity and sisterhood, also topped the bill.

These are troubled times for France. A massive arson attack on the country’s rail network preceded the Olympics opener, and there are ongoing fears about policing the rest of the sporting extravaganza. Macron is not well-placed to deal with such problems, because he has only been able to muster a provisional government since his own coalition came third in parliamentary elections held earlier this month.

Meanwhile, more inward-looking parties such as Marine Le Pen’s National Rally go from strength to strength, as they hark back to a lost France full of farms and robust countryfolk. Such nostalgists would certainly have liked to have seen a blue-eyed diva from Brittany or Champagne wowing on the world stage, rather than ones from North America.

The opening ceremony of the 2012 London Olympics was dominated by English icons, including former Beatle Paul McCartney and Elizabeth II herself. Republican France could not hope to compete with such fame, instead evoking memories of Marie Antoinette, the beheaded queen consort, and the long-dead Piaf.

It all reinforced the feeling that Paris is now something of a museum. More, it confirmed that France itself is rapidly being overrun by more dynamic cultural forces from across the Atlantic.


Peter Allen is a journalist and author based in Paris.

peterallenparis

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Mike Michaels
Mike Michaels
1 month ago

France is being over run but it’s not by the Americans! They’ll be the ones who come to save them. Maybe not this time however…

Dr E C
Dr E C
1 month ago
Reply to  Mike Michaels

I was about to post the very same comment. The gang-rape stories of tourists on day 1 of the Olympics are extremely troubling.

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
1 month ago
Reply to  Mike Michaels

Again?

John Tyler
John Tyler
1 month ago

The opening ceremony was extraordinary in its complete lack of understanding of how to produce a gripping spectacle.

Brian Kneebone
Brian Kneebone
1 month ago

Some places have maximal moments of interest. Even with crap plumbing, Paris, circa 1960, would have been a better travel destination than the better plumbed Paris of today.

Tyler Durden
Tyler Durden
1 month ago

At least when I lived there 2008-14 as a native English-speaker, Paris was a museum city full of retired Americans. As Western capital cities went, it felt pretty impoverished too but was adequately preserved for the wealthier end of the global tourist market.
Then terrorism came along as well as recession, so you can judge for yourself how that has changed the mentality of the city. If anything, this Olympic ceremony suggests that the culture has been completely wokefied with Christians everywhere complaining about the drag queen version of Da Vinci’s Last Supprt – this would also encompass the French Catholics who already vote for Marine Le Pen.

SEAN KELLY
SEAN KELLY
1 month ago

The ragging on France articles are so overdone. They nearly all try to project superiority but have this quality of the author seeming insecure seeping through the lines.

Champagne Socialist
Champagne Socialist
1 month ago

The inferiority complex that France induces in conservatives is fascinating! What are you all so scared of?

Liam F
Liam F
1 month ago

At least France tried to do something a bit different: for which we should applaud them.
Had they not had the misfortune of the arsonists and dreadful weather it may have been much better. Sometimes it’s just down to bad luck.