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The First Actress

A Novel of Sarah Bernhardt

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
“This novel about Sarah Bernhardt, the iconic French actress, is both a riveting portrait of the artist as a passionate young woman and a luscious historical novel full of period detail.”—Melanie Benjamin, New York Times bestselling author of Mistress of the Ritz and The Aviator’s Wife
From her beginnings as the daughter of a courtesan to her extraordinary transformation into the most celebrated actress of her era, Sarah Bernhardt is brought to life by an internationally bestselling author praised for his historical novels featuring famous women.
Sarah’s highly dramatic life starts when she returns to Paris after her convent schooling and is confronted by her mother’s demand to follow in the family trade as a courtesan. To escape this fate, Sarah pursues a career onstage at the esteemed Comédie-Française, until her rebellious acting style leads to her scandalous dismissal. Only nineteen years old and unemployed, Sarah is forced to submit to her mother’s wishes. But her seductive ease as a courtesan comes to an abrupt end when she discovers she is pregnant. Unwilling to give up her child, Sarah defies social condemnation and is cast adrift, penniless and alone. 
With her striking beauty and innovative performances in a bohemian theater, Sarah catapults to unexpected success; suddenly, audiences clamor to see this controversial young actress. But her world is torn asunder by the brutal 1870 siege of Paris. Sarah refuses to abandon the ravaged city, nursing wounded soldiers and risking her life.
Her return to the Comédie and her tempestuous affair with her leading man plunge Sarah into a fierce quest for independence. Undeterred, she risks everything to become France’s most acclaimed actress, enthralling audiences with her shocking portrayals of female and male characters. Sarah’s daring talent and outrageous London engagement pave her path to worldwide celebrity, with sold-out tours in Europe and America. 
Told in her own voice, this is Sarah Bernhardt’s incandescent story—a fascinating, intimate account of a woman whose unrivaled talent and indomitable spirit has enshrined her in history as the Divine Sarah.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 30, 2020
      Gortner (The Romanov Empress) captures the drama and pathos of legendary actor Sarah Bernhardt’s life in this enchanting work. The illegitimate child of a Jewish courtesan, Bernhardt is raised in Brittany until her wet nurse can no longer house her. In 1852, Sarah’s mother, Julie, sends her unloved, eight-year-old daughter to boarding school in Versailles. After Sarah’s theatrical gifts shine in a school play, one of her mother’s longtime patrons helps arrange acting training for her as well as a contract with the august Comédie-Française. The school’s rigid adherence to tradition clashes with Sarah’s questioning approach, and she leaves the Comédie in the first of many stormy changes from one theatrical company to the next. Becoming pregnant by Comte Émile de Kératry, an aristocratic paying lover, she decides to keep the baby—her only child, Maurice—despite the social taboo and the comte’s rejection. After Bernhardt does heroic work as a volunteer nurse and infirmary manager during the Franco-Prussian War, she becomes one of the most acclaimed actors of her age through a mix of talent, hard work, and savvy self-promotion. Skillful first-person narration evokes Bernhardt’s fierce energy and tempestuous liaisons, the vulnerability borne of her wounding childhood, and her struggles against misogyny and anti-Semitism. Gortner does justice to this trailblazing celebrity and her fascinating era.

    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2020

      From showing off her pet cheetah around London to allegedly sleeping in a casket, actress Sarah Bernhardt (1844-1923) definitely knew how to make an impression. In his latest novel, historical fiction veteran Gortner (The Romanov Empress) explores her rise to fame from her childhood as the daughter of a courtesan to her ascension to one of the most acclaimed (and gossiped about) actresses of her age. Along the way, she promotes an acting method that breaks all the period's established rules, fends off jealous rivals, and encounters many other big names of the era, Alexandre Dumas, Victor Hugo, and Oscar Wilde among them. Bernhardt's life was so full of intriguing incidents and affairs that Gortner faces a major challenge in trying to limit her to a 400-page novel (he notes as much in his acknowledgments). VERDICT Parts of the plot feel a little rushed and more time might have been spent exploring some of Bernhardt's choices, but overall Gortner has created a compelling portrait that will certainly whet readers' appetites to learn more about this charismatic figure. Recommended for fans of Melanie Benjamin and Allison Pataki.--Mara Bandy Fass, Champaign P.L., IL

      Copyright 2020 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      May 15, 2020
      Before she was the Incomparable or the Divine Sarah Bernhardt, she was the illegitimate and unwanted offspring of a French demimondaine. In his latest biographical novel, following The Romanov Empress (2018), Gortner explores themes pertaining to women's struggle for independence and fulfilment, charting the rise of this nineteenth-century acting legend who became an archetype for Hollywood's divas. Though admonished that, as an actress, to seek recognition is the height of vulgarity, a degradation of one's dedication to the craft, and of the craft itself, for Sarah, acting is but a means to an end. A nonexistent father and toxic mother leave her with a bottomless need for love, affirmation, and acclaim. A literal drama queen, the historical Bernhardt provides a great wealth of material?sleeping in a coffin, keeping pumas as pets, the circles in which she moved with the likes of Victor Hugo and Oscar Wilde?for the creation of a colorful melodrama, equal parts flamboyancy and pathos. Since Bernhardt loved to extravagantly mythologize her own story, she would doubtless delight in Gortner's first-person fictionalization of her extraordinary life.Women in Focus: The 19th in 2020(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2020, American Library Association.)

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