23 thoughts on “WCW: Madame de Montespan

  1. I have an author friend who is dying to write a novel about Montespan but she keeps getting told by the gatekeepers of publishing that no one knows who she is.

    1. Your friend needs to write that book! 1) The ‘gatekeepers of publishing’ are sometimes wrong, and 2) it’s through novels that so many people get turned on to real history.

    2. What Tiffani said!!!

      Please encourage her to follow her dreams and her gut. 🌷

  2. L’Allée du roi was the best one, in my opinion, and even if she wasn’t the lead, Athenais had decent screen time. And “Si Versailles m’était conté” is even more fun when you know Sacha Guitry was both giving work and slightly getting even with all his exes… And there were a LOT of exes!

  3. Just for historical accuracy: the Orleanist line in the French royal family originates with Louis XIII’s younger son, Philippe, Duke of Orléans, the famous (and homosexual) Monsieur, not with Madame de Montespan

        1. Louis XIV had the youngest of his illegitimate daughters by Montespan marry his Orleans nephew. When the betrothal was announced, the duchess d’Orleans, Liselotte, was so annoyed that she all but turned her back on Louis and later slapped her son across his face in view of the court. Two other illegitimate daughters married into cadet branches of the House of Bourbon. There have been a couple of bios of Montespan; see ‘Love & Louis XIV’ by Antonia Fraser and ‘Athenais’ by Lisa Hilton.

          1. I confirm that: Mme de Montespan’s daughter married Philippe of Orleans’s son, her cousin; and their daughter married the duke of Berry, Louis XIV’s third legitimate grandson by the Grand Dauphin ( though it was an awful wedded life, she… Had issues.)

  4. A touch O.T. but REALLY?! “She was played by Danielle Darrieux (the elderly Madame de Rosemonde from Dangerous Liaisons).”

    Ahem. Danielle Darrieux was a top French film star from the ’30s throughout the last century. She was also the heroine of my favorite French film “The Earrings of Mme. de…” (Ophuls’s greatest, and one I watch at least once a decade. It’s like reading Colette: I always notice and learn something new.) Darrieux is more than worthy of a WCW. She worked her way from sexy-young-thing to great tragic actress. She’s also the greatest looking 90-year-old ever: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Earrings_of_Madame_de%E2%80%A6

  5. I enjoyed Versailles (the show) personally. First season was better than the second though, and Georges Blaghden (I think that’s his name) is still too much of a modern-day pretty boy version of Louis for me to take him seriously. Needs a bit of flab. Philippe is awesome, though. Completely worth watching for him.

    Honestly Montespan doesn’t get treated very well by the end of the second season though, but that’s what happens when one is playing fast and loose with history for the sake of drama…

    1. The second season of that show had me seriously questioning whether they had changed some of the writing staff. They were so quick to kill off too many interesting characters and I am very ambivalent about going into another season of the program.

  6. I was transfixed by Jennifer Ehle’s Montespan – like, does she just not age or something!? She was utterly exquisite!

  7. I realize that of course she is never shown as she was IRL, aka chubby which after 11 pregnancies and a taste for sweet food turned into BBW ( Liselotte of Orleans once said at this time “Finally we look like each other!”); she even invented the lounge Levite dress to be more confortable ( and to hide her early pregnancies, hence the other name: Robe à l’Innocente)

  8. Danielle Darrieux was more than in Dangerous Laisons she was one of the best French actresses ever she began as a sexy young starlet in the 30’s to become one great tragedienne a made lots of great movies (many of then very nice period pieces) she was worthy three or five WCW because she was more than a great actress she made her mark in films that were true art and left a beautiful mark in the world of spectacle so sad she passed away two years ago already at least she got to 100 rest in peace Danielle

  9. FUN FACT Both Danielle Darrieux and Dominique Blanchar played Marie Vetsera when young and Madame de Montespan when older

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