When
the German army rolled into Paris in June of 1940 the Ritz was a favoured destination
for its officers. On orders from Berlin the hotel was not formally taken over
but remained privately run with Hans Franz Elmiger, its Swiss born deputy
manager, in charge of hotel operations.
Marie-Louise,
Madame Ritz, widow of the hotel’s founder, Cesar Ritz, remained an active
presence in the hotel.
The
German military did take all the rooms in one wing of the hotel paying
discounted rates.
The
American heiress, Laura Mae Corrigan, was evicted from the Imperial Suite in
favour of Reichsmarshall Hermann Goering.
Several
long term residents of the hotel continued to stay in the section of the hotel
not occupied by the Germans. Most famously, Coco Chanel, maintained a suite.
During
the German occupation the Ritz remained the focal point of elite Parisian life.
The champagne flowed. The famous mixed cocktails of Frank Meier in the rue
Chambon side bar were eagerly consumed. German officers and their French
mistresses celebrated good times.
There
were Resistance members among the hotel staff but the hotel, as with most of
the French population, accommodated if it did not actually collaborate with the
German occupiers.
There
were spies and plots swirling around the Ritz throughout the war. Mazzeo
discusses the meetings of German officers who attempted to assassinate Hitler
in the summer of 1944. For a few hours those plotters took over Paris until
word spread that Hitler had survived.
After
the Allied invasion of Normandy in June of 1944 there was a race to return to
Paris. While the Allied armies looked to re-take the capital of France among
American war correspondents it was a competition to be the first to reach Paris
and more important, re-claim the Ritz.
Ernest
Hemingway was determined to win the race. “Papa” at 45 effectively formed his
own private company within the American Army. He had been going to the Ritz
since he had arrived in Paris during the 1920’s and had but enough money for a
couple of drinks at the bar.
What
I had not known before reading the book was the number of women war
correspondents who covered the war. Several had been in as much in action as
any of the men.
The
relationships of two female journalists with Hemingway involved as much
intrigue as any war story. As 1944 unfolded Hemingway’s marriage to Martha
Gellhorn was swiftly deterioriating and Hemingway had entered into an affair with
Mary Welsh.
In
the final rush to Paris Hemingway famously said he intended to liberate the
cellars of the Ritz. His arrival at the hotel on the day of the liberation of
Paris was appropriately dramatic and he took charge of the hotel and the finest
wines were opened. Hemingway was to start each day at the hotel for the next
seven months by opening a bottle of fine champagne.
The
famous kept coming. A month after liberation Ingrid Bergman arrived at the Ritz and
became the lover of famed war photographer, Robert Capa.
The
word “fabulous” has been overused but it best describes the Ritz of that era.
Mazzeo
portrays a Hotel of grandeur and unsurpassed elegance. Within its rooms,
salons, bar and restaurant passed everyone who mattered in Paris. Generation
after generation of the elect in France made sure they were seen at the Ritz.
There
is a good movie to be made with the dramas of the rich, famous and beautiful
unfolding in a beautiful hotel.
The Hotel on Place Vendome is well
written. In a couple of chapters it tries too hard for drama but Mazzeo’s life
of the Ritz has made me wish I could visit that grand hotel which re-opens this
summer after a 2 year renovation.
What an absolutely fascinating book, Bill! At the risk of sounding trite, it sounds as though the place is the real protagonist here. And I really do enjoy history, so I'm sure that there's a lot I could learn from this. I'm glad you thought it was well written.
ReplyDeleteMargot: Thanks for the comment. People come and go while the fabulous hotel endures. Writers will find lots of intriguing plot ideas in life at the Ritz.
DeleteThis sounds like a very interesting book, and a different way of looking at Paris in WW2. I am looking forward to the rest of this series - I never tire of reading about this period, whether fiction or non-fiction.
ReplyDeleteMoira: Thanks for the comment. I have been fascinated by books about WW II since I read as a boy, The Ultra Secret, and learned the English had broken German codes.
DeleteThis books sounds very good, Bill. It sounds like it takes a unique approach to the subject. I will definitely be looking for a copy.
ReplyDeleteTracyK: It is a grand story. Thanks for the comment.
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