In France, A Star Rises From An Oft-Neglected Place

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[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hsPHXVnt27g[/youtube]

From NPR: Frenchman Jean Dujardin may have won this year’s Academy Award for best actor for his role in The Artist, but in France he was beat out for the country’s most prestigious acting award, the Cesar, by a new acting sensation: The 34-year-old son of African immigrants, Omar Sy.

Sy’s movie, The Intouchables, was a hit across Europe and is now playing in theaters in the U.S.  It’s a feel-good buddy comedy about a quadriplegic white aristocrat who hires an unemployed black kid from the projects as his personal aide. Despite the differences in age, race and background, Philippe the millionaire (renowned actor Francois Cluzet) and Driss (Sy) form a deep bond. The film confronts racism, poverty and infirmity, while Sy illuminates the screen with his rapid-fire banter and infectious laugh.  Continuez.

Au Revoir to the Minitel

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From the NYT: The Minitel, the once-revolutionary online service that prefigured the Internet in the early 1980s, allowed the French to search a national phone registry, buy clothing and train tickets, make restaurant reservations, read newspapers or exchange electronic messages more than a decade before similar services existed almost anywhere else in the world. The network is now largely relegated to the realm of nostalgia, though, with its dial-up connection, black-and-white screen and text that scrolls out one pixelated character at a time.

Conceived in France, by the French, for the French — efforts to export the technology met with little success — the Minitel was long ago overtaken by the borderless, freewheeling Internet. It has remained in service, though, and it still has its devotees, including about 2,500 dairy farmers in Brittany who rely on it to call for the inseminator when a cow is in heat or to request that the authorities come to haul away animal carcasses.

That will soon have to change. The Minitel network is to be permanently shut down on Saturday — maintenance costs are too high, profits too low — after three decades of service that have left deep marks on business and culture in France.  Complete story.

Vivez la Langue

From EF: Here’s a beautiful short story all in French, complete with phonetic transcriptions.

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Reel Style: Jules et Jim

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From GQ: According to legend, French New Wave director François Truffaut (who also directed the film adaptation of Fahrenheit 451) was browsing a bargain book bin in 1956 when he came across Henri-Pierre Roché’s semi-autobiographical novel, The Awakening: Jules et Jim. Struck by the story’s love triangle between two best friends and the woman they love (played in Truffaut’s film by the stunning Jeanne Moreau), his 1962 adaptation is an anthem to the energetic early ’60s French youth movement. While loose trousers, a wide array of hats, and tons of stripes are apparent in almost every scene, it’s the knitwear, in almost every cut imaginable, that inspires us the most.  Read More

The Case for French as the World’s Most Useful Language

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While any language will be useful for some jobs or for some regions, French is a language that is useful throughout the world as well as in the U.S. French as a foreign language is the second most frequently taught language in the world after English. The International Organization of Francophonie has 56 member states and governments. Of these, 28 countries have French as an official language. French is the only language other than English spoken on five continents.

When deciding on a second language for work or school, consider that French is a language that will give you plenty of choices later on in your studies or your career.

Continue reading at Language Magazine.

Visions of France: Three Postwar Photographers

An exhibition on French photographers through July 8 at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts

Many people consider Paris the “cradle of street photography,” a reference to an approach that, loosely defined, focuses on spontaneous images of daily life in urban areas. This exhibition looks at the work of three photographers—each roughly a generation younger than the next—who worked within this tradition while developing their own distinct visions: Robert Doisneau (French, 1912–1994), Édouard Boubat (French, 1923–1999), and Joel Meyerowitz (American, b. 1938). Although these photographers traveled throughout the world, this exhibition features their images of France—primarily those of Paris—as an homage to street photography.  Free admission.

In New York, French Politics Is Local

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From the NYT: Flanked by four campaign volunteers and a French television reporter, Corinne Narassiguin, a Socialist candidate in France’s coming parliamentary elections, went canvassing in her would-be district one evening in May.

But the doors she was knocking on were in the West Village.

“Bonjour, madame,” Ms. Narassiguin said over a town house’s intercom.

A volunteer leaned in to ask in French, “Would you like to talk for a few minutes, if you have time?”

The woman didn’t — she was putting her children to bed — but she did plan to vote for Ms. Narassiguin. “Merci beaucoup,” Ms. Narassiguin said, campaign postcards with her photograph in hand. As they went down the stoop, a volunteer shouted to the others, “It’s a vote!”

On June 16, for the first time, French nationals living in the United States and Canada will elect a deputy to represent them in the National Assembly of France. There are 11 such new parliamentary seats for citizens living abroad, in Europe and the rest of the globe. The North American constituency counts 156,683 registered voters — less than a quarter of the size of a United States Congressional district.  Continue here.

Valerie Trierweiler, France’s First Lady, Tweets and Upsets Nation

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From the Huffington Post: President Francois Hollande’s girlfriend set the French political establishment aghast Tuesday with a tweet seen as a dig against his ex-wife.

The tweet of support to Olivier Falorni, a politician in western France, was signed by Valerie Trierweiler and went viral on the Internet and dominated news shows.

It was seen as a dig at Segolene Royal, the mother of Hollande’s four children. Royal, also a former Socialist presidential candidate, is running against Falorni in the Charente-Maritime region in Sunday’s parliamentary elections final round.

The tweet starts: “Have courage, Olivier Falorni.” But it is easily interpreted as a not-so-veiled dig at Royal.

The Socialist Party recently banished Falorni for failing to step aside in favor of Royal, so he is running as a dissident candidate. After last Sunday’s first-round vote, Royal holds a narrow lead over Falorni.

Trierweiler, a journalist and avid tweeter, has made no secret of her determination to retain her independence, or of her discomfort with the image and chores of a first lady.  Continue.

French Women Worry About Getting Fat, Too

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From the NYT: The delivery box that carries a three-day sampling of meals from the weight-loss company Jenny Craig is tantalizingly large. Inside is a plastic-foam box containing a supply of what looks like candy: seven mysteriously labeled Anytime Bars and another treat known as a Yogurt Dream Bar. Jenny Craig would appear to be the Willy Wonka of weight-loss regimes, promising the magic of sweets that make you thin; the package also holds a brownie and a puff-pastry twist and a bag of chips. Finally, there are meals, packaged in sky blue: among them, French toast and an egg scramble and macaroni and cheese.  Continue here.

Joan of Arc Turns 600

From France Today: Jeanne d’Arc is back in the news. France is celebrating the 600th anniversary of the nation’s favorite folk heroine, beloved patron saint and—along with her great admirer Napoleon—perhaps the country’s most internationally famous historical character.

A series of commemorative events will honor the feisty young peasant girl who was guided by celestial voices to rouse her disheartened countrymen to “bouter”—an archaic term for “boot”—the invading English out of France. Her astonishing intervention changed the odds in the Hundred Years’ War, the ongoing territorial conflict between the ruling dynasties of France and England.

In May 1429, 17-year-old Jeanne led French troops into battle to lift the English siege at Orléans—her most significant feat and the source of her nickname, La Pucelle d’Orléans, the Maid of Orléans. She empowered the Dauphin, the rightful heir to the French throne, Charles VII, to claim his crown, opening the way for a complete French victory, finally gained in 1453.  Continue here.