Jean-Luc Choplin: From Mickey Mouse to Modern Musicals

Page 1

INTERVIEW

Jean-Luc Choplin

INTERVIEW

p e o p l e ❙ p l e a s ure ❙ pl a c e s

Jean-Luc Choplin

from mickey mouse to modern musicals meet the man who dared to take the thÉÂtre du châtelet back to its roots Words: Jeffrey T Iverson

J

ean-Luc Choplin still remembers the day in 2003 he learned that the directorship of the Théâtre du Châtelet was soon to become vacant. An old friend happened to be on the theatre’s board and thought Choplin would be perfect for the job. “I told him Mayor Delanoë would never have me,” Choplin recalls. “I worked at Disney; the whole Parisian cultural establishment would consider it sacrilegious!” His career profile was indeed unique: a series of high-level regional and national management appointments in the arts interrupted by a long foray into the private sector, including his tenure at the Walt Disney Company. Nevertheless, the Mayor of Paris did name him the next Directeur Général du Théâtre du Châtelet. Choplin was right about one thing, though – a chorus of critics awaited him when he started work three years later.

image: © denis lacharme

“hot pink, shocking and kitsch”

Jean-Luc Choplin was a controversial choice for Director of the Châtelet Theatre.

36

Subscribe at www.francetoday.com

Subscribe at www.francetoday.com

“Henceforth, the Théâtre du Châtelet, which Jean-Luc Choplin takes over in September, will be hot pink, shocking and kitsch,” announced Le Monde in 2006, after the first posters appeared for the season’s inaugural operetta, Francis Lopez’s Le Chanteur de Mexico, portraying a cheeky toreador festooned with flowers. For the French daily, the saccharine image not only set the tone for the impending Choplin mandate, it seemed to confirm the worst fears of Choplin’s detractors: “Many see in Jean-Luc Choplin a dangerous defender of the values of the entertainment world.” How could this “Mickey” (as some critics dubbed him), helm a temple of classical music, a stage where Mahler and Tchaikovsky conducted? But if Choplin had won over Delanoë, it was because they shared a new vision for the Châtelet: to return the theatre to its origins as the kind of vibrant, avant-garde, internationally minded institution where thousands flocked in 1876 to see Jules Verne’s Around the World in 80 Days; where Sergei Diaghilev and his Ballets Russes (with the help of Eric Satie and a couple young artists named Pablo Picasso and Jean Cocteau) shocked the performing arts world in 1917 with their revolutionary ballet, Parade; and where Parisians would get their first taste of the Broadway musical with the French premier of Show Boat in 1929. “This was both the theatre of Diaghilev and Jules Verne,” says Choplin. “That is the identity of Châtelet, a place in the heart of Paris completely open to the world, at once popular and sophisticated, and accessible to a very wide public, not just a little elitist world of opera.” And widen the audience did. In Choplin’s first three and a half years, one million spectators passed through the doors

➻ 37


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.