1789: Les Amants de la Bastille

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1789
Les Amants de la Bastille
1789-les-amants-de-la-bastille 2425.jpg
MusicDove Attia
Laurent Delort
Louis Delort


Benoit Poher
William Rousseau
Olivier Schultheis
LyricsDove Attia
Vincent Baguian
BookDove Attia
Productions2012 Palais des Sports de Paris

1789: Les Amants de la Bastille is a French stage musical with music by Dove Attia, Laurent Delort, Louis Delort, , , Benoit Poher, William Rousseau and Olivier Schultheis as well as lyrics by Attia and Vincent Baguian and a book by Attia and . It had its debut on 10 October 2012 at Palais des Sports de Paris. An accompanying double CD album was also successful in the French SNEP charts.

Synopsis[]

In the spring of 1789, France is devastated by famine. The French people begin to rise in unrest against the ruling French king Louis XVI. Ronan, a young peasant, leads a revolt marching to Paris after his father's death (killed by Count Lazare de Peyrolles), where he encounters Olympe, an assistant governess of the children of Marie Antoinette of Austria. The two fall in love during the tumultuous stirrings of the French Revolution, their romance playing out amid encounters with major Revolutionary figures such as Georges Jacques Danton, Maximilien de Robespierre and Camille Desmoulins. After they are separated, Ronan and Olympe find each other again on 14 July 1789 in the course of the assault on the Bastille prison— an encounter that seals their destiny even as a new era begins.

Performances[]

As a pre-launch, the musical was performed on 29 September 2012.

The main role of Ronan had been entrusted initially to . When Carnot suffered from vocal cord problems and had to undergo an operation, his role was given to Louis Delort, a finalist in France's The Voice: la plus belle voix competition.[1] Carnot ended up with a lesser role as Lazare, Count of Peyrol.

Sébastien Agius, the winner of the inaugural season of X Factor in France in 2009, plays the role of Maximilien de Robespierre.[2]

Personnel[]

  • Concept/Book: Dove Attia and
  • Words/Lyrics: Dove Attia and Vincent Baguian
  • Music: Dove Attia, Laurent Delort, Louis Delort, , , Benoit Poher, William Rousseau, Olivier Schultheis
  • Staging and choreography:
  • Production: Dove Attia and Albert Cohen
  • Casting:
  • Costumes: Frédéric Olivier
  • Hairdressing: Sébastien Quinet
  • Lights: Xavier Lauwers
  • Images: Patrick Neys
Singers
  • - Ronan, peasant revolutionary and lover of Bastille
  • Camille Lou - Olympe, assistant governor to royal kids, lover of Bastille
  • - Camille Desmoulins, lawyer, journalist and politician, "writer of the revolution"
  • / Emmanuelle Bouaziz - Marie Antoinette of Austria, Queen of France
  • Sébastien Agius : Maximilien de Robespierre, lawyer and politician
  • - Solène, Ronan's sister
  • - Lazare, count of Peyrol, a royal officer
  • - Georges Jacques Danton, lawyer and head of the district of the Cordeliers
  • - Auguste Ramard, known as "Le Mouchard"
  • Charlie Loiselier, Sonia Ben Ammar, Morgane Rouault, Elisa Bergomi and Eva Baranes
Actors
  • Philippe Escande - Louis XVI, King of France
  • Tatiana Matre - Yolande de Polignac, Duchess of Polignac and Marquise of Mancini, friend and confidant of Marie Antoinette
  • Guillaume Delvingt - Jacques Necker, General Director of Finance
  • Cyril Romoli - Charles X of France, Count of Artois, brother of Louis XVI
Dancers
  • Benjamin Akl
  • Mehdi Baki
  • Jonathan Ber
  • Guillaume Arvin Berod
  • Noellie Bordelet
  • Emmanuelle Bouaziz
  • Camilla Brezzi
  • Alessandra Cito
  • Gian Lorenzo De Donno
  • Juliette Delatroche
  • Gian Luca Falvo
  • Mikael Fau
  • Michael Feigenbaum
  • Tamara Fernando
  • Yoan Grosjean
  • Simon Gruszka
  • Yann Hervé
  • Alexandra Jezouin
  • Véronique Lemonnier
  • Olivier Mathieu
  • Corentin Mazo
  • Aurore Mettray
  • Adrien Ouaki
  • Loredana Perrichetti
  • Geoffrey Ploquin
  • Gaëtan Renaudin
  • Arthur Rojo
  • Emmanuelle Seguin Hernandez
  • Jessie Toesca
  • Jimmy Vairon
  • Valentina Valenti
  • Valentin Vossenat

Discography[]

Initial release (2 April 2012)[]

  1. "Pour la peine" (Rod Janois, Nathalia, Sébastien Agius, Roxane Le Texier, Matthieu Carnot and Camille Lou) - 3:19
  2. "Hey ha" (Sébastien Agius) - 3:01
  3. "" (Nathalia) - 3:18
  4. "" (Rod Janois) - 3:41
  5. "Le temps s'en va" (Matthieu Carnot and Camille Lou) - 2:52
  6. "Fixe" (Rod Janois) - 3:02
  7. "Je mise tout" (Roxane Le Texier) - 3:10
  8. "La sentence" (Camille Lou) - 3:34
  9. "Maniaque" (Matthieu Carnot) - 2:59
  10. "La rue nous appartient" (Rod Janois and Matthieu Carnot) - 3:52
  11. "A quoi tu danses?" (Sébastien Agius) - 2:36
  12. "La nuit m'appelle" (Nathalia) - 3:15
  13. "Le cri de ma naissance" (Nathalia) - 2:43
  14. "Ça ira mon amour" (acoustic version) - 4:26

Full release (22 October 2012)[]

CD 1
  1. "Prélude" (instrumental) - 1:24
  2. "Le cri de ma naissance" (Nathalia) - 2:43
  3. "Je mise tout" (Roxane Le Texier) - 3:10
  4. "Au Palais royal / Les prostituées" (David Ban) - 3:27
  5. "La nuit m'appelle" (Nathalia) - 3:15
  6. "Tomber dans ses yeux" (Louis Delort and Camille Lou) - 2:48
  7. "Maniaque" (Matthieu Carnot) - 2:59
  8. "La sentence" (Camille Lou) - 3:34
  9. "Hey ha" (Sébastien Agius) - 3:01
  10. "La guerre pour se plaire / Le Dauphin" (Louis Delort and Camille Lou) - 5:25
  11. "La rue nous appartient" (Rod Janois and Louis Delort) - 3:52
CD 2
  1. "A quoi tu danses?" (Sébastien Agius) -
  2. "Je suis un dieu / Le cauchemar" (Yamin Dib) -
  3. "Je veux le monde" (Nathalia) -
  4. "Ça ira mon amour" (Rod Janois) -
  5. "Nous ne sommes" (Matthieu Carnot) -
  6. "Je vous rends mon âme" (Roxane Le Texier) -
  7. "Sur ma peau" (Louis Delort) -
  8. "La prise de la Bastille" (instrumental) -
  9. "Fixe / Les Droits des l'homme" (Rod Janois) -
  10. "Pour la peine" (Rod Janois, Nathalia, Sébastien Agius, Roxane Le Texier, Matthieu Carnot and Camille Lou) - 3:19
Bonus tracks
  1. "Ça ira mon amour" (acoustic version) - 3:43
  2. "Je veux le monde" (acoustic version) - 2:55
  3. "Pour un nouveau monde" (Sonia Ben Ammar and Charlie Loiselier) - 3:04
  4. "Filles et femmes à la fois" (Nathalia, Camille Lou and Roxane Le Texier) - 3:02
  5. "Allez viens (c'est bientôt la fin)" (Rod Janois, Louis Delort et Sébastien Agius) - 3:00

Albums[]

Year Album Peak positions Certification
BEL
Wa

FR
[3]
SWI
2012 1789: Les Amants de la Bastille 6 7 84

Singles[]

"Ça ira mon amour," performed by Rod Janois, became the debut single from the show. A music video was released in October 2011. A collector's edition was made available on 2 January 2012. The follow-up single, "Pour la peine," was sung by the musical's ensemble and was released on 27 February 2012, and its music video was released on 2 March 2012. The music video for a third song, "Je veux le monde", performed by Nathalia, was made available in May 2012, followed by a fourth release, "Tomber dans ses yeux," performed by Louis Delort and Camille Lou.

Year Single Peak positions Album
BEL
Wa

FR
[3]
2012 "Pour la peine" 21 36 1789: Les Amants de la Bastille
"Je veux le monde"
(1789, les amants de la Bastille / Nathalia)
 – 103
"Tomber dans ses yeux"
(1789, Les Amants de la Bastille /
Louis Delort & Camille Lou)
 – 38
2013 "Sur ma peau"
(1789, Les Amants de la Bastille)
 – 193

DVD[]

A 2-DVD set of the December 18, 2012 performance was released on November 6, 2013 in France.[4]

References[]

  1. ^ Le Parisien: Louis Delort: le chouchou de « The Voice » fait sa Révolution (in French)
  2. ^ Premiere: Sébastien Agius (X Factor 2009) - après avoir été doublure, il obtient un rôle dans une comédie musicale! (in French)
  3. ^ a b LesCharts.com: 1789: Les Amanats de la Bastille page
  4. ^ Kong, Stephany. "Un DVD et des prolongations pour "1789 – Les Amants de la Bastille"". Musicalavenue.fr. Archived from the original on 2020-08-06. Retrieved 2020-03-16. (in French)
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