JeNeSaisQuoi_Fringe_ 2- Press (TRAD ... - Nathalie Joly chante .fr

Aug 26, 2013 - and book set JE NE SAIS QUOI including all corresondance between ..... A real show, directed by Jacques Verzier, inspired by this recital, saw the light of day ... Mr Fourneau, who transposed his name into Latin, fornax, and ...
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Press Release For immediate release

30 May 2013

Je ne sais quoi A music show by Nathalie Joly Institut français d’Ecosse Fringe 2013 8 – 26 August 2013, 6.15 pm (75 mins) Episode 1: Even days / Episode 2: Odd days Singer and actress Nathalie Joly presents Je ne sais quoi, a diptych show mixing music and theatre tribute to Yvette Guilbert, undisputed Queen of the Parisian café concert and friend of Freud. Accompanied by her pianist Jean-Pierre Gesbert, Nathalie Joly gives her voice to French cabaret singer Yvette Guilbert in this original production mixing music and theatre. Recalling the two most significant episodes of Guilbert’s life, Joly invites us to discover the witty and mischievous repertoire of the undisputed star of the Moulin Rouge in Montmartre who mesmerized and befriended Sigmund Freud before flying to New York to open a school of performing arts for deprived girls and invent the “Rythme Fondu”, precursor of poetry slam. Episode 1: 1890, in a Parisian cabaret, Freud hears Yvette Guilbert for the first time and literally succumbs to the charm of her interpretation and the profoundness of her songs. A lifelong friendship followed. Based on the original letters of their unpublished correspondence, Je ne sais quoi, episode 1 shows the 50-years long friendship between the French cabaret star and the Father of Psychoanalysis. The latter was fascinated by Guilbert and her songs, not only because they reminded him of the Paris of his youth, but by all that these songs expressed of profound sentiment, desire, conflict and humour in distress, accompanying his reflection on the relationship between the unconscious and sexuality.  Through extracts of their letters and a selection of 17 colourful songs, including her biggest hits Madame Arthur and La Glu, this first part navigates between humour and drama, mischief and cruelty, compassion and tenderness.   Je ne sais quoi, episode 1 was created at the request of the Psychoanalytical Society of Paris (SPP) in 2008 to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the birth of Sigmund Freud and the 80 years of the creation of the SPP. Freud and Guilbert’s letters were kindly made available by the Freud Museum in London. CD and book set JE NE SAIS QUOI including all corresondance between Freud and Yvette Guilbert, (part 1) Episode 2: circa 1900. At the height of her fame, Guilbert terminates her contracts and flies to New York where she opens a singing and elocution school for deprived girls and composes a new repertoire of songs, influenced by poetry and medieval songs. In this episode 2 of Yvette Guilbert’s destiny, Nathalie Joly explores her new repertoire composed to perfect her art of “rythme fondu”, a new language between speech and song that will become the Sprechgesang that will be so popular in Europe before the war and until today with poetry slams. Taking roots in the popular tradition, between fairy tales and pieces of news, these songs reflect Guilbert’s commitment to feminist values and explore stronger themes like infanticide, misfortune, social decay and rejection. Through Joly’s voice, Guilbert questions the process of creation and transmission and the role of the artist in society. CD ENV’LÀ UNE DRÔLE D’AFFAIRE (part 2) Initially conceived as individual shows, the two episodes will be presented as a diptych show for its UK premiere at the 2013 Edinburgh Fringe. Since its creation in 2008, Joly gave over 250 performances of Je ne sais quoi in France and around the world, including at the famous Théâtre de la TempêteCartoucherie in Paris, thanks to the support of its director Ariane Mouchkine (Les Naufragés du Fol Espoir, Edinburgh International Festival 2012).

Actress and singer, Nathalie Joly received the first prize in singing at the Boulogne National Conservatoire. She has worked in association with talented directors (including Philippe Adrien, Alain Françon, Thierry Roisin, Michel Rostain, Maurice Durozier, Lisa Wumser….) and composers (including Maurice Ohana, Christian Sebille, and Philippe Legoff). International artist, Nathalie Joly is fascinated by all the spoken - sung forms, at the origin of all his shows. She had directed and sung Je sais que tu es dans la salle about Sacha Guitry and Yvonne Printemps, Cabaret ambulant about itinerant theater’s repertoire, Cafés Cantantes songs of superstition, Paris Bukarest about the Romanian singer Maria Tanase J’attends un navire – Cabaret de l’Exil adapted from Kurt Weill at the Theatre de la Tempête. She has recently created "Diseuses" (Marseille 2013), a history of spoken sung, with rappers of Marseille. Nathalie Joly and the director of Je ne sais quoi Jacques Verzier met during the creation of Rêves de Kafka and Ké voi both directed by Philippe Adrien. They regularly work together on several creations both as directors and performers. In Afghanistan, she also realized the documentary movie Tashakor about Music and women in Kaboul. She also realized an exhibition about Yvette Guilbert, Diseuse fin de siècle (MP13) Distribution Author and Singer: Nathalie Joly Piano: Jean-Pierre Gesbert Director: Jacques Verzier Lighting designer: Arnaud Sauer Costumes: Claire Risterruci Producer: Marche la Route A performance produced in association with the Société Psychanalytique de Paris, the Théâtre de la Tempête Cartoucherie, Gallimard, the Société des Gens de Lettres de France and with the permission of the Sigmund Freud Copyrights. A show supported by Radio France, Sofia, Spedidam and CNV. For further information, interviews, production images and reviewing enquiries, please contact Vanessa Bismuth, Communications & PR Officer, Institut français d’Ecosse – 0131 225 5366 / [email protected] Institut français d’Ecosse/ Venue 134 – 13 Randolph Crescent, Edinburgh EH3 7TT. Box Office: 0131 225 53 66 Mon - Sun 9.30 am – 9.00 pm. Listings information Title: Je ne sais quoi Company: Nathalie Joly Category: Music (PG) Sung in French, English supertitles Date: August 8-11, 13-18, 20-26, 6.15 pm (75 mins) Even days: Episode 1 / Odd days: Episode 2 Tickets: £10 (£8) Box Office: 0131 225 5366 or www.edfringe.com About the Institut français d’Ecosse The Institut français is the agency of the French Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs with responsibility for cultural activity outside France. In Scotland, the agency is represented by the Institut français d’Ecosse (Edinburgh) which promotes French language and culture by providing French courses and organising events (film screenings, talks, exhibitions, concerts, etc.). It also aims to encourage crosscultural exchange between France and Scotland, in cooperation with Scottish Francophile institutions. Additional information is available on www.ifecosse.org.uk or follow us on Twitter @ifecosse. More information about Fringe Festival 2013 at the Institut français: http://vivelefringe.org/je-ne-saisquoi/ Twitter: @vivelefringe More information about Nathalie Joly: http://marchelaroute.free.fr/     Contact Production   Marche   La   Route 49   avenue   Foch   75116   PARIS   FRANCE     +33 6 80 85 75 39 [email protected]  

2  artists  on  tour,  1    technician  for  lights  /  very  light  data  shee  

Press  extracts  Je  ne  sais  quoi  /  Part  1:     Le  Monde  -­‐  A  fascinating,  funny,  simple,  and  very  light-­‐hearted  show,…  Nathalie  Joly  is  loyal  to   Madam  Yvette’s  singing  ".  Véronique  Mortaigne   Libération  The  show  effortlessly  links  songs,  extracts  from  letters  and  dialogue…  A  show  bursting   with  humor  and  intelligence  …  Dynamic  and  funny,  ‘Je  ne  sais  quoi’  is  a  breath  of  fresh  air.     François-­‐Xavier  Gomez   FRANCE  CULTURE  "A  delicious  and  very  beautiful  show  on  Freud's  admiration  for  Yvette  Guilbert's   music".    David  Jisse     Le  Point    The  Paris  which  the  psychoanalyst  loved,  handed  on  a  tray  .    Valérie  Marin  La  Meslée   Télérama  ***  -­‐  This  show  is  a  must-­‐see  of  pure  delight,  a  gem.    Sylviane  Bernard-­‐Gresh   Europe  1  -­‐  Nathalie  Joly  masters  the  art  of  ‘spoken  and  sung’  and  wonderfully  interprets  the  nuances   of  this  very  Parisian  repertoire.  She  acts  and  sings  Love  in  all  its  forms  with  derision  and  exceptional   precision.  Diane  Shenouda   The  Point  -­‐  The  show  resembles  a  dream,  it’s  a  leap  into  the  subconscious  and  into  a  Paris  of  the   past.  Marie  Audran   Journal  du  Dimanche  -­‐  This  show  is  a  true  marvel,  where  humour,  elegance  and  authenticity  revive   the  magical  atmosphere  of  live  music  cafés.  Alexis  Campion   Le  Nouvel  Observateur  -­‐  Nathalie  Joly  breathes  new  life  into  the  Parisian  live  music  cafés  of  the   interwar  period.  Timothée  Barrière   Fémina  JDD  -­‐  Nathalie  Joly's  cabaret  performance  is  intellectual  and  popular  at  the  same  time.  A   delight!    Eric  Emmanuel  Schmitt  ***   La  Provence  –  Both  light-­‐hearted  and  deep,  Nathalie  Joly's  musical  performance  is  captivating.  A   show  as  pleasant  as  it  is  successful.  Olga  Bibiloni  

Press  extracts  /  En  v’là  une  drôle  d’affaire  /  Part  2   Le  Monde  -­  An  hour  and  fifteen  minutes  of  pure  delight...  Nathalie  Joly  presents  the  Guilbert   mystery  with  a  liberating  sobriety,  and  portrays  the  chameleon  woman,  who  was  capable  of   constantly  changing  registers  and characters,  therefore  helping  the  Freudian  reflection  on  the   essence  of  art.  Véronique  Mortaigne   Le  Figaro  -­‐  For  those  who  love  beautiful  songs,  for  those  who  love  intriguing  and  extraordinary   ‘characters’-­‐  and  Yvette  Guilbert  certainly  was  one  -­‐  this  show  is  a  moment  of  happiness  ....  Nathalie   Joly,  with  her  charm,  grace,  musicality  and  subtle  sensitivity,  shows  us  Yvette  Guilbert’s  world.   Armelle  Héliot   Liberation  –A  singing  and  acting  performance...Choruses,  popular  songs  of  the  streets,  medieval   ballads…  their  darkness  has  never  been  equaled.  The  song  «  Morphine»  is  still  as  fascinating,  and   shines  bright  like  a  black  diamond….FX  Gomez   Pariscope  -­‐  Nathalie  Joly  embodies  the  many  nuances  of  this  exceptional  artist.  An  amazing  show!     Le  Canard  enchaîné  –  Highly  pleasing  to  the  eye  and  to  the  mind.  AlbertAlgoud   Télérama  -­  "We  love"  -­‐  The  fate  of  the  Queen  of  the  ‘caf  'conc'’,  a  pioneer  of  feminism.    In  a  very   subtle  performance,  Nathalie  Joly  depicts  Yvette  Guilbert’s  contribution  to  the  interpretation  and   writing  of  texts  full  of  colorful  characters.  Sylviane  Bernard  Gresh   Politis  -­‐  Nathalie  Joly  wrote  an  amazing  play  ...  Jacques  Verzier’s  staging  and  pianist  Jean  Pierre   Gesbert’s  lively  performance  intensify  the  profoundness  of  this  theatrical  journey  through  time,  in   which  the  actress’s  powerful  voice    highlights  her  great  talent  for  acting.  Gilles  Costaz   France  Musique  -­‐  A  magnificent  performance,  victim  of  its  own  success.  A  great  show,  imagine  a   small  café  theater  in  Paris,  where  time  doesn’t  matter!    Go  and  see  it!  Denisa  Kerschova   Europe  1  –  With  her  velvet  voice,  Nathalie  Joly  sings  wonderfully  and  raps,  ahead  of  the  time.  A   warm  and  intimate  show  which  sparkles  with  humour  and  intelligence,  don’t  miss  it!  D.  Shenouda   JDD  -­‐  Nathalie  Joly  glorifies  Yvette  Guilbert.  To  be  enjoyed  without  moderation.  Alexis  Campion   France  Inter  -­‐  Performed  by  a  remarkable  singer  and  actress  named  Nathalie  Joly,  who  dives  into   the  historical  background  of  the  character  she  embodies.  A  show  full  of  surprises.  .  Gilles  Costaz   Avant  scène  théâtre  -­‐  Performances  of  great  beauty,  often  projecting  a  unique  light.  

             

LE  MONDE  29.12.2012               The  Yvette  Guilbert  case  on  Nathalie  Joly’s  couch  

 

 

 

                    The   singer   of   ‘Fiacre’   fascinated   Freud   as   much   as   she   did   Toulouse-­‐Lautrec.   Musical   psychoanalysis.  With  En  voila  une  drôle  d’affaire,  Nathalie  Joly  offers  an  hour  and  fifteen  minutes   of   pure   delight   –   acted   and   sung.   She   is   accompanied   by   Jean-­‐Pierre   Gesbert   at   the   piano   and   directed  by  Jacques  Verzier.  It  is  also  the  second  episode  of  a  story  which  started  late  2008,  when   Nathalie   Joly   created   Je   ne   sais   quoi.   In   this   performance,   nineteen   songs   created   by   Yvette   Guilbert   (1865-­‐1944)   -­‐   some   of   which   are   still   famous   (Le   fiacre,   Madame   Arthur,   La   Glu)   -­‐     are   mixed   with   read   excerpts   of   her   correspondence,   from   1926   to   1939,   with   an   inveterate   admirer,   Sigmund  Freud.                                 Freud   discovered   the   ‘diseuse   de   fin   de   siècle’   in   1889   at   the   Eldorado   Cabaret,   on   Mrs   Charcot’s   advice.   Her   husband,   a   specialist   in   hysteria,   had   asked   the   Viennese   doctor   to   come   to   Paris.   When   first   listening   to   Dites-­‐moi   si   je   suis   belle,   a   narcissistic   song   sung   on   a   tortuous  melody   from  the  14th  century,  he  remained  speechless.  He  could  not  take  his  eyes  of  Toulouse-­‐Lautrec’s   muse,  who  relentlessly  drew  her  with  a  thin  waistline  and  long  black  gloves.    In  2008,  the  Société   française  de  psychanalyse  (the  French  psychoanalysis  society),  who  took  a  strong  interest  in  the   ‘story’   asked   Nathalie   Joly   to   portray   the   chameleon   woman,   who   was   capable   of   constantly   changing   registers   (tragedy,   comedy)   and   characters   (sleazy,   prudish,   yobs;   betrayed,   cruel   or   naïve   women,   etc.),   therefore   helping   the   Freudian   reflection   on   the   essence   of   art.       Idolatry  -­‐  The  woman  whose  aura  did  not  stop  in  Paris,  who  invented  the  spoken  and  sung  and   who  married  another  Viennese  man  in  1897,  the  biologist  Max  Schiller,  vanished  into  thin  air  in   1900,   at   the   peak   of   her   success.   A   serious   kidney   ailment   shows   her   the   limits   of   idolatry:   no   more  acting,  no  more  glamour,  and  no  more  admirers.  En  voilà  une  drôle  d’affaire  depicts  Yvette   Guilbert’s   second   life.   Once   she’s   recovered,   she   goes   to   New   York   to   teach   the   art   of   acting,   singing   and   speaking   at   the   David   Mannes   Music   School.   There,   she   creates   a   school,   free   for   penniless   young   women.   She   then   developed   a   repertoire   her   friend   Freud   was   particularly   affectionate   of,   freeing   herself   from   La   Pocharde   or   La   Pierreuse   and   from   Léon   Xanroff’s   crude   words,  to  tell  Les  Anneaux  de  Marianson,  a  legend  of  the  16th  century,  Le  Miracle  de  Saint-­‐Berthe  or   the   punishment   of   the   infanticide   mother   (Complainte   d’une   méchante,   17th   century).     Let   down   by   her   American   creditor,   Yvette   Guilbert   returns   to   her   Parisian   Empire   with   her,   as   she   put   it,   ‘repertoire   gants   noirs’   (black   gloves   repertoire),   singing   La   Morphinée   (written   with   Jean  Lorrain).  Famous  again.                                           Nathalie   Joly   presents   the   Guilbert   mystery   with   a   liberating   sobriety.   First   wearing   a   cabaret   dress  and  then  a  kimono,  in  reference  to  the  start  of  the  20th  century  japonism,  and  using  folding   screens  and  shadow  plays,  she  grasps  the  scathing  humour  of  Partie  Carrée  entre  les  Boudin  et  les   Boutons   (of  Marcel  de  Lihus),  a  lengthy  psychoanalysis  case,  as  well  as  the  popular  dramaturgy  of   La  chanson  de  Saint-­‐Nicolas  (traditional  French).                                   At  the  end  of  one  of  the  Un  je  ne  sais  quoi  shows  in  2009,  a  very  old  lady  came  to  see  her,  offering   her  to  look  through  some  of  Yvette  Guilbert’s  archives  she  had  kept:  there  was  an  entire  trunk  full   of   unreleased   scores,   notebooks,   etc.   Treasures   and   perseverance   fuel   destiny.     Véronique  Mortaigne  

LIBERATION  02.01.2013  

            Nathalie  Joly  in  the  arms  of  Morphine  -­‐  By  François-­‐Xavier  Gomez  

 

                     

Cabaret.   With   ‘En   v’là   une   drôle   d’affaire’,   the   singer   and   actress   continues   to   explore   Yvette   Guilbert’s   unconventional   universe,   ‘diseuse’   (speaker)   and   queen   of   the   Belle   Epoque  café-­‐concert.                                           A  strange  ritual  is  currently  taking  place  in  the  intimate  Vieille  Grille,  historical  lair  of   the   French   chanson,  nestled  between  the  Jardin  des  Plantes  and  the  Mosquée  de  Paris  (5th  arrondissement).   Cuckold   husbands,   chopped   up   children   put   in   the   salting   tub,   stabber   pimps   and   pallid   bourgeois  on  morphine  pass  before  our  eyes  every  night.                             ‘Rhythme   fondu’.   […]   En   v’là   une   drôle   d’affaire   pays   tribute   to   Yvette   Guilbert   (1865-­‐1944),   an   idolised   singer,   drawn   by   Toulouse-­‐Lautrec.   […]   She   imposed   her   own   ‘diseuse’   genre,   that   she   called  ‘rythme  fondu’  and  which  she  defined  in  her  mémoires  as:  ‘the  science  of  turning  words  on   and   off,   of   putting   them,   depending   on   their   meaning,   in   the   shadow   or   in   the   light.’                                                       As  a  singer  and  actress,  Nathalie  Joly  has  long  taken  a  strong  interest  in  the  work  and  life  of  Yvette   Guilbert.    ‘When  I  was  at  the  academy  I  was  very  interested  in  Kurt  Weill  and  his   Sprechgesang,  the   ‘spoken   and   sung’   she   was   the   pioneer   of’.   In   2005,   after   her   show   Paris-­‐Bukarest,   on   the   great   Rumanian   singer   Maria   Tanase,   the   heads   of   the   Société   psychanalitique   de   Paris   (SPP,   Parisian   psychoanalytic  Society)  asked  her  to  do  a  recital  dedicated  to  Yvette  Guilbert,  on  the  occasion  of   the  celebration  of  Sigmund  Freud’s  150th  birthday.  How  were  the  father  of  psychoanalysis  and  the   Belle   Epoque   singer   linked?   By   an   admiration   which   later   became   a   true   friendship.   […]   In   2006,   at   La   Mutualité,   Nathalie   Joly   presents   a   selection   of   songs,   ‘the   ones   which   had   something  to  do  with  the  subconscious  and  sexuality’,  in  front  of  an  audience  of  800  international   psychoanalysts.  […]                                   Variations.  A  real  show,  directed  by  Jacques  Verzier,  inspired  by  this  recital,  saw  the  light  of  day   in  2008.  […]  There  have  now  been  more  than  250  performances  of  Je  ne  sais  quoi,  in  France  and   overseas,   and   in   foreign   languages   such   as   Spanish   or   Portuguese.   This   show   highlights   with   intelligence   and   humour   the   fact   that   trendy   songs   are   a   society’s   subconscious.   […]   En   v’là   une   drôle  d’affaire,  the  second  show  dedicated  to  Yvette  Guilbert,  Jean-­‐Pierre  Gesbert  still  at  the  piano,   brings   the   finishing   touch   to   the   image   given   by   Je   ne   sais   quoi:   cheeky   tunes,   popular   and   sad   songs  like  La  Pierreuse  as  well  as  medieval  laments  full  of  infanticides  and  serial-­‐killers.  […]  Yvette   Guilbert’s  split  personalities,  which  fascinated  Freud,  stand  out  even  more.                         Treasure.   Good   luck   got   in   the   middle   of   Nathalie   Joly’s   investigations   on   Yvette   Guilbert.   An   elderly   lady   called   the   Vieille   Grille   one   day   to   say   that   she   had   kept   family   souvenirs   of   Yvette   Guilbert   and   that   she   wanted   to   give   them   to   someone   likely   to   be   interested.   ‘This   very   chic   lady,   a   violinist,   handed   me   two   very   thick   folders   overflowing   with   documents,   says   Nathalie   Joly.   Handwritten  scores,  letters,  concert  programs…’  Several  unreleased  songs  of  the  show  come  from   this   unexpected   treasure.   One   of   them   is   particularly   intriguing:   La   Morphinée.   Yvette   Guilbert   says  in  her  mémoires  that  it  was  one  her  greatest  hits.  But  there  is  a  problem:  it  was  never  burnt   on  a  78s  and  the  score  cannot  be  found.  […]  And,  at  just  the  right  moment,  the  library  of  Radio   France  finds  the  lost  score  during  an  inventory.  This  song  is  still  as  fascinating  as  it  used  to  be  and   shines  bright  like  a  black  diamond.      

LE  MONDE  25.12.2009   About   Sigmund   Freud’s   interest   for   Yvette   Guilbert,   the   most   modern   of   the   yesteryear   singers.   Nathalie   Joly   breathes   new   life   into   Madam   Yvette’s   ‘spoken   and   sung’.     Because   he   was   interested   in   women,   art   and   their   respective   mysteries,   Sigmund   Freud   had   been   captivated   by   Yvette   Guilbert   (1865-­‐19944).   The   Viennese   doctor   had   come   to   Paris   in   1890   to   attend   Professor   Charcot’s   consultations,   a   renowned   specialist   in   hysteria.   The   cabaret   singer   began   her   career   at   the   Eldorado,   and   the   founder   of   psychoanalysis   listened,   speechless,   to   ‘Dites-­‐moi   si   je   suis   belle’,   sung   on   a   tortuous   melody   form   the   14th   century.   Freud   remained   faithful   to   Toulouse-­‐Lautrec’s   favourite   model.   The   latter   relentlessly   drew   her   with   a   thin   waistline,   wandering   eyes   and   long   black   gloves.   In   1897,   the   most   modern   of   the   yesteryear   singers   married   another   Viennese   man,   Max   Schiller.   Later   on,   Freud   hung   up   on   his   wall   the   portrait  of  this  woman  who  fascinated  Paris,  until  she  became  ill  in  1900,  next  to  the  portrait  of   his  friend  and  writer  Lou  Andreas-­‐Salomé.  Freud  maintained  an  exciting  correspondence  with  the   ‘diseuse  de  fin  de  siècle’,  inimitable  thanks  to  her  ‘spoken  and  sung’.                       Passionate   about   this   very   European   genre,   Nathalie   Joly   has   created   a   show   called   ‘Je   ne   sais   quoi’,  based  on  nineteen  songs  and  eighteen  unpublished  letters,  written  between  1926  and  1939,   when   Freud   was   a   refugee   in   London.   She   created   it   in   2008   on   the   Société   française   de   psychoanalyse’s  (French  psychoanalysis  Society)  initiative,  at  the  Cartoucherie  de  Vincennes,  and   will   perform   until   December   31st   with   a   pianist,   Jean-­‐Pierre   Gesbert,   on   the   small   stage   of   La   Vieille   Grille,   a   cabaret   like   very   few   remain   in   Paris.     A   fascinating   box   set   which   contains   the   songs  from  the  show,  as  well  as  the  text  of  the  letters  the  Freud  Museum  of  London  gave  her,  has   also  been  published.    Of  Yvette  Guilbert,  we  remember  her  songs  composed  by  Léon  Xanrof  -­‐  a   Mr   Fourneau,   who   transposed   his   name   into   Latin,   fornax,   and   reversed   it   -­‐   which   strongly   influenced   Barbara   at   her   debuts   in   1950.   Songs   such   as   ‘Le   Fiacre’   or   the   wonderful   ‘Maitresse   d’acteur’  have  travelled  through  time.                                               Yvette  Guilbert,  the  ‘diseuse’,  put  texts  from  Paul  de  Kock  (Madame  Arthur)  and  ancient  themes   (Verligodin)  to  music,  or  would  take  hold  of  fabulous  tragedies  such  as  La  Glu  (of  Jean  Richepin   and   Gounod)   or   La   Soularde   (Jules   Jouy   and   Eugène   Porcin).   Freud   questioned   himself   on   the   essence   of   art.   On   the   one   hand,   Yvette   Guilbert,   who   constantly   changed   registers   –   drama,   humour;   shady,   prudish   and   cheeky   characters;   betrayed,   cruel   and   naïve   women,   etc.   On   the   other,  Charlie  Chaplin  ‘who  always  plays  the  same  role,  that  of  a  sickly,  poor,  defenceless,  clumsy   boy,  for  whom  everything  turns  out  fine.  But  do  you  think  that  to  play  this  role  he  has  to  forget   his   own   self?   On   the   contrary,   he   only   represents   himself,   as   he   was   in   his   pitiful   youth’,   Freud   wrote  in  a  letter  to  Max  Schiller,  Madam  Yvette’s  husband.  Concerning  Yvette  Guilbert,  who  has   more  than  thirty  ‘women’  in  her  repertoire,  Freud  receives  the  following  reply  from  Max  Schiller:   ‘Yvette   Guilbert   has   great   concentration   energy,   a   very   acute   sensitivity,   an   extraordinary   imagination.   I   must   add   to   all   this   a   great   sense   of   observation   as   well   as   a   tremendous   will   to   create   in   truth,   were   it   to   be   at   her   expense.’     ‘Je  ne  sais  quoi’  is  a  fascinating  show,  often  funny,  never  graceless,  and  simple  (directed  by  Jacques   Verzier),   with   which   one   can   rediscover   realistic   songs   (La   Soularde),   fables   (La   Glum   the   story   of   a  po’boy  who  kills  his  mother  and  takes  her  heart  on  the  request  of  a  cruel  lover;  on  his  way  back,  

he   runs,   the   heart   falls,   rolls   down   the   path   and   asks   him   crying:   ‘Have   you   hurt   yourself   my   child?’);  mischievousness  (Quand  on  vous  aime  comme  ça).  Nathalie  Joly  sings  wonderfully  well,   highlights  the  importance  of  the  Moulin  Rouge  and  Divan  Japonais  star,  never  rudely  explaining   the   ‘je   ne   sais   quoi’   which   makes   so   many   men   fantasise   on   Madam   Arthur.     Véronique  Mortaigne  

  LIBERATION  18.12.2008   SIGMUND  FREUD  AND  YVETTE’S  INTERPRETATION                                   Recital:  At  the  Cartoucherie  de  Vincennes,  Nathalie  Joly  bring  back  to  life  the  repertoire   of  a  queen  of  the  ‘café-­‐concert’,  the  psychoanalyst’s  muse…                           On  the  walls  of  his  office  in  Vienna,  Sigmund  Freud  was  said  to  have  had  two  portraits  of  women:   Lou   Andréas   Salomé   and   the   singer   Yvette   Guilbert.   Was   the   father   of   psychoanalysis   a   fan   of   light-­‐hearted   songs?   Indeed.   In   1890,   whilst   studying   with   the   famous   Professor   Charcot,   Freud   discovered   the   singer   at   the   beginning   of   her   career,   before   she   became   the   queen   of   the   ‘café-­‐ concert’,   a   celebrity   idolised   by   everybody   who   is   anybody   in   Paris.   From   1926   to   1939,   the   Viennese  doctor  corresponds  with  Yvette  Guilbert.  From  these  unpublished  letters,  Nathalie  Joly   has  created  an  extremely  funny  and  clever  show,  which  makes  you  forget  the  lack  of  comfort  of   the   venue.   We   can   easily   understand   what   fascinated   Freud   in   the   singer’s   repertoire:   the   split   personalities  which  allow  her  to  embody  all  of  the  characters  (‘elegant,  virtuous  or  naïve  women’,   he   says   in   one   of   his   letters),   the   liberty   of   speech   (often   thanks   to   humour)   when   speaking   of   adultery,  sexuality  or  feminism.  But  what  made  Yvette  Guilbert  the  greatest  singer  of  her  time  was   above   all   her   art   of   interpretation,   thanks   to   a   much   nuanced   ‘spoken   and   sung’.   Her   ‘hits’   (Le   Fiacre,  Madame  Arthur)  are  modest  ironic  work  of  arts,  but  she  also  excelled  in  melodrama,  never   falling  into  the  pathos  of  realistic  singers.  Particularly  with  La  Glu,  a  fascinating  gothic  and  quite   gory  tale  (text:  Jean  Richepin,  music:  Charles  Gounod).                         The  show  strings  together  songs  and  excerpts  from  letters  (The  Freud  Museum  of  Vienna  has  kept   18   of   them,   written   between   1926   and   1928),   as   well   as   dialogues   between   Nathalie   Joly   and   her   pianist.   A   century   later,   we   still   laugh   when   listening   to   ‘L’Eloge   des   vieux’   or   to   ‘L’Hôtel   du   numéro  3’.  ‘Those  who  need  napkins  to  eat,  come  down  with  their  sheets  /  And  the  dog  washes   the  plates  /  At  the  hotel  of  number  3’.      François  Xavier  Gomez    

LE  POINT  11.12.2008   Yvette  Guilbert  and  Freud  are  reunited  in  Nathalie  Joly’s  show  thanks  to  their  correspondence.  It’s   the   Paris   Freud   loved,   with   its   said   and   unsaid   things,   handed   on   a   plate.   This   unpublished   correspondence  can  be  found  in  a  CD-­‐book  (‘Je  ne  sais  quoi’,  Seven  Doc),  in  between  two  songs   from  the  show.  ‘Dites-­‐moi  que  je  suis  belle’  was  Freud’s  favourite…  Valérie  Marin  la  Meslée.    

 

FRANCE  CULTURE  –  L’oreille  d’un  sourd  -­‐  04.2008   ‘A   delightful   and   very   beautiful   show   by   Nathalie   Joly   on   Freud’s   musical   admiration   for   Yvette   Guilbert.   On   the   occasion   of   Nathalie   Joly’s   delightful   show   in   which   she   sings   the   friendship   between   Yvette   Guilbert   and   Sigmund   Freud,   David   Jisse’s   column   tackles   the   question   of   the   separation  between  music  and  psychoanalysis.  […]  Freud  wrote:  ‘It  is  maybe  necessary  to  say  that   the  analytical  ear  listens  to  the  ‘meaning’  and  neither  to  the  sound  nor  the  tune,  and  that  there   are   two   voices:   the   voice   that   talks   and   the   voice   that   sings.   Music   is   maybe   of   no   use   in   psychoanalysis’  This  modest  column  will  not  provide  answers  to  all  the  questions,  but  I  wanted  to   let  Yvette  Guilbert  speak,  as  Nathalie  Joly’s  beautiful  show  has  inspired  this  column.’  David  Jisse    

TELERAMA     ‘Inspired   by   Yvette   Guilbert's   songs   and   her   correspondence   with   Freud.   Yvette   Guilbert,   indisputable  queen  of  the  ‘café-­‐concert’  in  1890  Paris,  represents  for  Freud  the  Paris  of  his  youth.   As   their   unpublished   correspondence   shows,   he   admired   the   humour,   the   tenderness   and   the   cruelty  of  Yvette  Guilbert’s  lyrics.  Nathalie  Joly,  actress  and  singer,  depicts  the  improbable  but  real   relationship  between  these  two  figures  through  songs  and  texts’.  Sylviane  Bernard-­‐Gresh    

LIBERATION  07.02.2010   JE  NE  SAIS  QUOI  ON  THE  COUCH   Just  like  Madam  Arthur  ‘who  was  much,  much,  much  talked  about’  thanks  to  her  ‘je  ne  sais  quoi’,   the   show,   already   praised   in   our   columns   (Libération   of   December   18th,   2008),   is   more   than   successful:   after   the   Cartoucherie   de   Vincennes,   the   Off   d’Avignon   and   the   Vieille   Grille   in   December,  it  is  now  coming  to  the  Lucernaire.                                   Listening   to   the   great   Yvette   Guilbert’s   songs   (1865-­‐1944)   is   always   an   immense   pleasure,   as   Nathalie  Joly  excels  in  presenting  the  nuances  and  innuendos  of  this  forgotten  repertoire.  But  Je   ne  sais  quoi  is  more  than  just  a  recital:  it  revolves  around  the  correspondence  between  the  singer   and   her   admirer,   Sigmund   Freud,   who   discovered   her   when   he   came   to   Paris   to   attend   Dr   Charcot’s  classes.  In  one  of  her  letters,  Yvette  describes  her  art  as  ‘the  science  of  turning  words  on   and  off,  of  putting  them,  depending  on  their  meaning,  in  the  shadow  or  in  the  light’.  Dynamic  and   funny,  Je  ne  sais  quoi  is  a  breath  of  fresh  air  which  breathes  new  life  into  the  forgotten  essence  of   the  ‘café-­‐concert’,  a  refuge  for  Parisian  intellectuals  and  the  liberty  of  speech.  FX  Gomez      

THE  LIST,  july  2013    

 

 

 

http://edinburghfestival.list.co.uk/article/52374-­‐top-­‐5-­‐cabaret-­‐shows-­‐at-­‐the-­‐edinburgh-­‐festival-­‐fringe-­‐ 2013      

Site  http://marchelaroute.free.fr   Video    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NGjcr3O7omc     http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NNu0dB6PRyQ   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_PEo93tdCn0   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G8cMElk4BcA   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wCOBWEhDVdU  

  Calendar     Part  2  -­‐  En  v’là  une  drôle  d’affaire,  Nathalie  Joly    sings  Yvette  Guilbert     25  septembre  au  3  novembre  2013  Le  Lucernaire,  Paris  6ème   17  octobre  2013  Antony,  Auditorium  du  conservatoire  (Théâtre  Firmin  Gémier  hors  les  murs)   18  octobre  2013      Clichy  sous  bois  espace  93  (sous  chapiteau)   16  novembre  2013  Sens,  TMS   28  novembre  2013  Caves  Legrand  Paris  (Galerie  Vivienne)   29  novembre  2013  Bessancourt  (Festival  du  Val  d’Oise)   7  décembre  2013  Sarcelles  (Festival  du  Val  d’Oise)   14  décembre  2013  Soissons,  Le  mail     15  –  31  Janvier  2014  Brésil  Sao  Paulo,  …     14  février  2014  Ussel  (Corrèze)   1er  au  8  juin  2013    Tournée  ACB  Scène  Nationale  Bar  le  Duc  hors  les  murs     Part  1    -­‐  Je  ne  sais  quoi,  Nathalie  Joly    sings  Yvette  Guilbert    13  décembre  2013  Le  Mail  Soissons    29  mars  2014  Lanester     Paris  Bukarest,  Nathalie  Joly  sings    Maria  Tanase   19  au  22  novembre  2013  La  Vieille  Grille  Paris  5ème   Mars  2014    Nordeste  Brésil,  Francophonie