Chantal Thomas Explained

Chantal Thomas
Birth Date:18 October 1945
Birth Place:Lyon, France
Language:French
Nationality:French
Genre:European history
Historical fiction
Notableworks:Les adieux à la reine
Le Testament d'Olympe
L'esprit de conversation
Awards:Prix Femina

Chantal Thomas (born 18 October 1945) is a French writer and historian. Her 2002 book, Farewell, My Queen, won the Prix Femina and was adapted into a 2012 film starring Diane Kruger and Léa Seydoux.

Career

Thomas was born in Lyon in 1945, and was raised in Arcachon, Bordeaux, and Paris. Her life has included teaching jobs at American and French universities (such as Yale and Princeton) as well as a publishing career. She has published nineteen works, including essays on the Marquis de Sade, Casanova, and Marie Antoinette.[1]

In 2002, Thomas published Les adieux à la reine (Farewell, My Queen). The novel gave a fictional account of the final days of Marie Antoinette in power through the perspective of one of her servants. It won the Prix Femina in 2002,[2] and was later adapted into the 2012 film Farewell, My Queen. The film stars Diane Kruger as the titular queen and Léa Seydoux as her servant Sidonie Laborde. Thomas co-wrote the screenplay,[3] [4] and it opened the 62nd Berlin International Film Festival.[5] [6] Helen Falconer of The Guardian called the work "a well written slice of history" with "evocative, observant prose," but criticized it for creating a narrator who "merely provides us with a pair of eyes to see through rather than capturing our interest in her own right." While disagreeing in its classification as a novel, Falconer did however add that Farewell, My Queen "generates in the reader a real sense of being a fly on the wall, eavesdropping on the affairs of the great and the not so good."[7]

Thomas is currently the director of research at the French National Centre for Scientific Research.[1]

She was elected a member of the Académie française (seat number 12) on 28 January 2021.[8]

Works

translated into English as The Wicked Queen : The Origins of the Myth of Marie-Antoinette (1999) by Julie Rose

translated into English as Coping with freedom : reflections on ephemeral happiness (2001), by Andrea L. Secara

translated into English as Farewell, My Queen (2003), by Moishe Black

translated into English as The Exchange of Princesses (2014), by John Cullen

translated into English as Memories of Low Tide (2019), by Natasha Lehrer

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Chantal Thomas . Encyclopédie des auteurs . French . 20 June 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20111231160019/http://laregledujeu.org/encyclopedie/2010/05/11/144/chantal-thomas/ . 31 December 2011 .
  2. Web site: Tous les lauréats du Prix Femina. 2 February 2011. French. Prix-litteraires.net. 3 April 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190403080053/http://www.prix-litteraires.net/femina_liste.php. dead.
  3. Web site: SFIFF 2012: Opening night film 'Farewell, My Queen' . . John . Angelico . 22 April 2012 . 20 June 2012.
  4. Web site: Farewell, My Queen: Berlin Film Review . . Deborah . Young . 9 February 2012 . 20 June 2012.
  5. Web site: Marie Antoinette drama to open Berlin Film Festival . 5 January 2012. 5 January 2012. BBC.
  6. Web site: Benoît Jacquot's Les Adieux à la reine to Open the 62nd Berlinale . 5 January 2012 . Berlin International Film Festival.
  7. Web site: The rats of Versailles . . Helen . Falconer . 9 January 2004 . 21 June 2012.
  8. Web site: Académie française: Chantal Thomas succède à Jean d'Ormesson . Thierry . Clermont . 2021-01-28 . fr . Le Figaro.