So I watched La Traviata yesterday and was looking up a little basic info beforehand. Verdi’s character, the OG golden hearted hooker with a tragic fate, named
Violetta, is based on Dumas’ novel
Lady of the Camelias, where she’s named
Marguerite, in turn based on a real -life high class sex worker in 19th c.
France, known for her beauty, her famous lovers and having died of tuberculosis at 23. Her name was
Marie Duplessis, but her actual birth name was
Alphonsine Plessis. Now adding “du” to her surname makes sense because it sounds fancier, and I guess
Alphonsine is a bit dowdy and unglamorous, but I wonder why she changed it to
Marie that must have been the name of every other woman at the time. Maybe she wanted something classic and respectable? Thoughts as to the name change to the other iterations of this figure ‘s name? She’s also known as
Camille in Cukor’s film version starring
Greta Garbo and basically Satine in Moulin Rouge! is also a variation on this character.
“Someone once said that it wasn’t so hard to do right; what was hard was to know what was right to do.”
William X. Kienzle
This message was edited yesterday, 6:59 AM