Berliner Boersenzeitung - Backstage artisans keep Moulin Rouge kicking

EUR -
AED 4.10325
AFN 75.965185
ALL 98.586956
AMD 432.687076
ANG 2.013065
AOA 1050.210494
ARS 1081.367552
AUD 1.613675
AWG 2.013629
AZN 1.894135
BAM 1.956818
BBD 2.255345
BDT 133.469449
BGN 1.955326
BHD 0.421061
BIF 3228.50942
BMD 1.117131
BND 1.432829
BOB 7.7185
BRL 6.070713
BSD 1.116966
BTN 93.469748
BWP 14.601709
BYN 3.655202
BYR 21895.773228
BZD 2.251513
CAD 1.506954
CDF 3200.581131
CHF 0.940965
CLF 0.036533
CLP 1008.356275
CNY 7.832325
CNH 7.800191
COP 4645.713342
CRC 579.745776
CUC 1.117131
CUP 29.603979
CVE 111.070805
CZK 25.149954
DJF 198.905962
DKK 7.456282
DOP 67.474163
DZD 147.727199
EGP 54.031304
ERN 16.756969
ETB 134.362947
FJD 2.434451
FKP 0.850761
GBP 0.833587
GEL 3.044151
GGP 0.850761
GHS 17.729053
GIP 0.850761
GMD 76.523573
GNF 9635.25738
GTQ 8.639998
GYD 233.656221
HKD 8.682678
HNL 27.783167
HRK 7.595388
HTG 147.204502
HUF 396.938861
IDR 16885.048409
ILS 4.131408
IMP 0.850761
INR 93.503163
IQD 1463.441986
IRR 47036.812952
ISK 150.696979
JEP 0.850761
JMD 175.48131
JOD 0.791715
JPY 159.641402
KES 144.110045
KGS 94.065175
KHR 4546.724114
KMF 493.911635
KPW 1005.417525
KRW 1461.93381
KWD 0.340747
KYD 0.930859
KZT 535.767556
LAK 24671.844651
LBP 100039.107143
LKR 333.51354
LRD 216.444432
LSL 19.292789
LTL 3.298599
LVL 0.675742
LYD 5.289567
MAD 10.812435
MDL 19.452689
MGA 5079.595719
MKD 61.500113
MMK 3628.398844
MNT 3796.012064
MOP 8.944515
MRU 44.350046
MUR 51.332214
MVR 17.147867
MWK 1938.222288
MXN 21.90323
MYR 4.608227
MZN 71.39108
NAD 19.292793
NGN 1863.92186
NIO 41.048994
NOK 11.733129
NPR 149.548517
NZD 1.757778
OMR 0.430057
PAB 1.116951
PEN 4.208455
PGK 4.438084
PHP 62.59454
PKR 310.42291
PLN 4.273186
PYG 8718.536596
QAR 4.067196
RON 4.975929
RSD 117.080932
RUB 104.264253
RWF 1489.136006
SAR 4.190729
SBD 9.275224
SCR 14.804475
SDG 671.953317
SEK 11.276055
SGD 1.430436
SHP 0.850761
SLE 25.523437
SLL 23425.678781
SOS 637.881697
SRD 34.296483
STD 23122.362165
SVC 9.773085
SYP 2806.825801
SZL 19.293033
THB 36.169924
TJS 11.884729
TMT 3.921131
TND 3.37094
TOP 2.616432
TRY 38.160315
TTD 7.587525
TWD 35.234877
TZS 3049.767903
UAH 45.981026
UGX 4126.461132
USD 1.117131
UYU 46.83437
UZS 14262.414728
VEF 4046866.775521
VES 41.132874
VND 27492.600976
VUV 132.628071
WST 3.125133
XAF 656.348464
XAG 0.035274
XAU 0.000422
XCD 3.019103
XDR 0.826278
XOF 653.521659
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.673906
ZAR 19.11613
ZMK 10055.558422
ZMW 29.539221
ZWL 359.715819
  • RBGPF

    2.5000

    63.3

    +3.95%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    25.07

    -0.16%

  • GSK

    0.1600

    41.06

    +0.39%

  • BCC

    1.0100

    141.32

    +0.71%

  • SCS

    0.0700

    13.28

    +0.53%

  • AZN

    -0.2400

    77.94

    -0.31%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    13.51

    +0.37%

  • NGG

    -0.1100

    69.95

    -0.16%

  • RIO

    0.5750

    71.325

    +0.81%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0700

    7.03

    -1%

  • RELX

    -0.3900

    47.7

    -0.82%

  • CMSD

    0.0700

    25.18

    +0.28%

  • BTI

    0.0181

    37.095

    +0.05%

  • VOD

    0.0350

    10.075

    +0.35%

  • BCE

    0.2450

    35.075

    +0.7%

  • BP

    0.4590

    31.249

    +1.47%

Backstage artisans keep Moulin Rouge kicking
Backstage artisans keep Moulin Rouge kicking / Photo: Miguel MEDINA - AFP

Backstage artisans keep Moulin Rouge kicking

Even with the famous sails of its windmill gone, the Moulin Rouge never lets up: twice a night, 365 nights a year, in a whirlwind of feathers, rhinestones and sequins.

Text size:

The sails of the 135-year-old cabaret in the Montmartre district of Paris collapsed last month -- the cause remains unknown.

But with some 1,700 spectators still coming every evening, the show must go on. And while the 60-strong troupe of "Doriss Girls" -- named after legendary choreographer Doris Haung -- get all the attention, creating and maintaining their costumes is another huge and highly skilled job.

The show has daunting annual requirements: nearly 1,000 tailor-made outfits each requiring up to 250 hours of assembly, 800 pairs of shoes, and not forgetting the three kilometres of ostrich-feather boas.

The clacking of sewing machines backstage is a near-constant soundtrack before and after -- and sometimes during -- shows.

"We are on every evening. The costumes wear out... But the show must always be the same, at the highest quality," the cabaret's general director, Jean-Victor Clerico, 38, told AFP.

In the same family for four generations, the Moulin Rouge started buying up small artisan workshops in the 2000s -- partly experts in featherwork and embroidery -- that were struggling to survive in modern-day Paris.

"These artisans are a living heritage that risked disappearing, and they are essential for the show," said Clerico.

"It was the duty of the Moulin to perpetuate their existence and allow the transmission of their knowledge to younger generations," he added.

Mine Verges, 88, a costume designer since the 1960s, was one of the first to come under the Moulin's umbrella.

Her workshop supplies and maintains the troupe, as well as many other clients.

"The most complicated costumes are those of the cabaret. Everything must be much more solid than normal clothing, and when there are feathers, it must above all be pleasant for the dancers," she told AFP.

"Le Moulin was the first cabaret with whom I worked and it will be the last," she said, adding that she was pleased her savoir-faire will be passed down.

- Featherwork -

Supplier to haute couture houses such as Hermes and Louis Vuitton, Maison Fevrier was set up in 1929 and is the last featherwork workshop in the heart of Paris.

Its "plumasserie" (fine feather work) has been officially recognised as a "living heritage" by the French government.

It became part of the Moulin family in 2009 and handles some three tonnes of ostrich, pheasant and rooster feathers for the cabaret each year.

Embroidery is handled by Atelier Valentin using the ancestral technique of Luneville crochet and chain stitch.

"The marvellous has always fascinated me. There is no limit to what you can embroider: sequins, pearls, rhinestones, repurposed metal pieces... The only imperative for a stage costume is to be strong," said its director, Caroline Valentin, whose other clients including the Paris Opera, Disney, Givenchy and the Academie Francaise.

Shoes are another integral part of the show, especially for the energetic high-kicking antics of the Can-Can that conclude every evening.

Clairvoy, a cobblers founded in 1945, has been part of the Moulin's operation since 2007.

Nicolas Maistriaux, 45, and his team make the troupe's shoes, taking up to 60 hours to assemble each pair, not counting their maintenance and renewal when the dancers' heels wear them out.

Kylie Minogue also called on Maison Clairvoy for her recent tour.

"Our jobs are rewarding beyond anything," said Valentin. "We have the absolutely immense chance to create beauty... That's what artistic craftsmanship is all about."

(B.Hartmann--BBZ)