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French novelist, playwright, and screenwriter, whose dispassionate
portrayals of bored, amoral middle-class people have been translated
into many languages. Sagan published her first novel, Bonjour
tristesse (1954), at the age of 19. It was a succes de scandale
for its depiction of a young woman breaking up her father's affair.
"Sur ce sentiment inconnu dont l'ennui, la douceur m'obsèdent,
j'hésite à apposer le nom, le beau nom grave de tristesse. C'est
un sentiment si complet, si égoïste que j'en ai presque honte
alors que la tristesse m'a toujours paru honorable. Je ne la connaissais
pas, elle, mais l'ennui, le regret, plus rarement le remords.
Aujourd'hui, quelque chose se replie sur moi comme une soie, énervante
et douce, et me sépare des autres."
(from Bonjour tristesse)
Françoise
Sagan was born in the village of Cajarc, in south-western France,
into a well-to-do family. She was the third child of Pierre Quoirez,
a prosperous industrialist, and Marie (Laubard) Quoirez. At the
outbreak of World War II the family moved to the provinces, living
mainly in Lyon; Sagan also spent some time in Switzerland. After
the liberation of France in 1944 the family returned to Paris. Sagan
was educated at convent schools and attended the University of Sorbonne.
In 1953 she failed the second-year examination for higher academic
degrees and spent several weeks during the summer writing her first
novel, Bonjour tristesse. The title of the book came from
Paul Eluard. Sagan took her pseudonym from the fictional Princess
of Sagan in Marcel Proust's Remembrance of Things Past. The
thin story of Cécile's first love affair was an immediate bestseller,
and made its author famous in France and abroad. Sagan travelled
in the United States, and met among others the American writer Truman
Capote. In 1957 her fondness of fast cars led to an accident in
which she almost died. In 1958 Sagan married Guy Schoeller, a publisher.
They divorced in 1962, and she married Bob Westhof; an American
ceramics designer - this marriage also ended in divorce.
Cécile, the narrator of Bonjour tristesse, is a pampered
teenager who spends her summer holidays in a villa in the south
of France. She has failed her exams and finds Cyril, a young law
student, more interesting than books. Her forty-year-old father,
Raymond, is widowed. Anne Larsen, his late wife's friend, ousts
his latest mistress Elsa. Anne works in fashion, and has come for
a short visit to the villa. "I feared boredom and tranquillity
more than anything. In order to achieve serenity, my father and
I had to have excitement, and this Anne was not prepared to admit."
To provoke her father's jealousy, she asks Cyril and Elsa to pretend
to be in love. Cyril wants to marry Cécile, and accepts the plan.
Anne is in love with Raymond. For Raymond Elsa represents his lost
years, but he sees in the beautiful and sober Anne a perfect wife
and mother to Cécile. The plan works, Anne drives recklessly away
from the villa, and dies in a car accident. Cécile returns with
her father to Paris and leaves Cyril, and her youth behind. The
world of the rich and beautiful is hollow, and the carefree existence
is lost forever.
Echoes of the novel's melancholic atmosphere - 'Hello Sadness'
- can be heard in Simon & Garfunkel's famous song 'The Sound of
Silence' (1964). The story was made into a film in 1957, directed
by Otto Preminger, starring Deborah Kerr, David Niven, and Jean
Seberg. It became a huge success in France where it was shot in
monochrome for Paris and colour for the Riviera. Preminger later
complained that the American critics didn't do it justice. ..."
In America the critics said it wasn't French enough, which is very
funny."
After the novel Sagan become a spokesperson for disillusioned youth,
and bored teenagers. A Certain Smile (1958), her second book,
was also a success. It told the story of a student's love affair
with a middle-aged man. Sagan's style is classically cool, restrained,
and austere, continuing the tradition of the French psychological
novel during the decade when noveau roman made its breakthrough.
Her minimalist language of polite everyday speech reveals the almost
Existential aimlessness of her characters. Sagan once said that
for her "writing is a question of finding a certain rhythm...
Much of the time life is a sort of rhythmic progression of three
characters." As in the works of Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone
de Beauvoir, Sagan's lonely characters are disappointed in their
personal relationships, and try to fill the passage of time with
the pursuit of pleasure. Although often classified as entertainment
by male critics, her earlier novels in particular deserve more attention
according to feminist critics. The confessional tone of Bonjou
tristesse has been considered a precursor to writing by women
from more recent years.
In the 1960s Sagan turned from novels to plays, proving her talent
for writing witty dialogue. Her fist plays, Castle in Sweden
(1960) and Violins Sometimes (1961) were only moderately
successful. After The Purple Dress of Valentine (1963) Sagan
wrote Happiness, Odd and Pass (1964), in which a young army
officer wavers between love and his wish to be killed. In The
Vanishing Horse (1966) Sagan took up the subject of the amorous
conflict between two generations.
Sagan's later novels include Le Garde du coeur (1968), set
in Hollywood. In the story a middle-aged woman, Dorothy, takes over
the guardianships of a beautiful boy, Lewis. She must choose between
her mature lover and the young dropout. At the same time a series
of mysterious deaths shock the film circles. A scar on the Soul
(1974) is a combination of essay, autobiography, and novel. Un
Orage immobile (1983) is set in 1932 in a small country village,
and depicts the passionate love story of a beautiful widow, observed
by a young notary. In Un Chagrin de passage (1994, A Fleeting
Sorrow) Sagan follows the thoughts and reactions of a man in his
thirties, Paul Cazavel, who learns that he has lung cancer. Paul
sees his life and closest relationships, his mistress and former
wife, in a new light.
For further reading: Françoise Sagan: Une Conscience de
Femme Refoulée by Nathalie Morello (2000); Encyclopedia of World
Literature in the 20th Century, ed. by Steven R. Serafin (1999,
vol. 4); Sagan by J. Lamy (1988); Bonjour Sagan by B. Poirot-Delpech
(1988); Françoise Sagan by J. Miller (1988); Françoise Sagan;
ou, L'élégance de survivre by P. Vandromme (1977); World Authors
1950-1970, ed. by John Wakeman (1975); Le cas Françoise Sagan
by G. Hourdin (1958); Françoise Sagan by G. Mourgue (1958)
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Selected works:
- Bonjour tristesse, 1954 (Prix des critiques) -film 1957, dir.
by Otto Preminger, starring Jean Seberg, David Niven, Deborah
Kerr
- Un certain sourire, 1956 - A Certain Smile - film 1958,
dir. by Jean Negulesco, starring Christine Carere, Rossano Brazzi,
Joan Fontaine
- Dans un mois, dans un an, 1957 - Those without
Shadows
- Aimez-vous Brahms?
- Chateau en Suède, 1960 - Castle
in Sweden (play)
- Le gigolo, 1960
- Les Merveilleux Nuages, 1961
- The Wonderful Clouds
- Les violons parfois, 1962 - Violins Sometimes
(play)
- Landru, 1963
- La Robe mauve de Valentine, 1963 - The
Purple Dress of Valentine (play)
- Bonheur, Impair et passe, 1964
- Happiness, Odd and Pass (play)
- Toxique, 1964
- La Chamade,
1965
- Le Cheval évanoui, 1966
- L'écharde, 1966 - The Splinter
(play)
- Le cheval évanoui, 1966 - The Vanishing Horse (play)
- Le Garde du coeur, 1968 - The Heart-Keeper
- Un peu de soleil
dans l'eau froide, 1969 - A Few Hours of Sunlight
- Un piano dans
l'herbe, 1970
- Des bleus à l'âme, 1972
- Il est des parfums,
1973
- Un profil perdu, 1974 - Lost Profile
- Réponses 1954-74,
1975 - Nightbird
- Brigitte Bardot, 1975 - transl. (with Ghislain
Dussart)
- Des yeux de soie, 1976 Silken Eyes
- Le Lit défait,
1977 - The Unmade Bed
- Le sang doré des Borgia, 1977
- Il fait
beau jour et nuit, 1978 (play)
- Le Chien couchant, 1980 - Salad
Days
- La Femme fardée, 1981 -The Painted Lady
- Musiques de scène,
1981 -Incidental Music
- Un Orage immobile, 1983 - The Still Storm
- Avec mon meilleur souvenir, un recueil de portraits, 1984 -
With Fondest Regards
- De guerre lasse, 1985 - Engagements of
the Heart
- Sand et Musset, 1985
- La Maison de Raquel Vega, 1985
- Un sang d'aquarelle, 1987 - Painting in Blood
- L'Excès contraire,
1987 (play)
- Sarah Bernhardt ou le Rire incassable, 1987 - Dear
Sarah Bernhardt
- La sentinelle de Paris
- La Laisse, 1989
- Les
Faux-Fuyants, 1991 - Evasion
- Répliques, 1992
- Et toute ma sympathie,
1993
- Un Chagrin de passage, 1994 - A Fleeting Sorrow
- Le miroir égaré, 1996
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This biography was written by Petri Liukkonen.
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