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FUAIM Lecture - Emmanuela Wroth - 24/10/24, 脫 Riada Hall, 11:00
This lecture is online and
From Branchu to Baker: Tracing Innovative Diasporic Performance Practices Through Time and Space in Nineteenth-Century Paris
Historically, the emergence of Black women performers in European circles tends to be located in the twentieth century, with the arrival in Paris of Jos茅phine Baker (1906鈥1975). This paper seeks to recover the established Parisian racialized and sexualized diasporic performance practices into which Baker inserted herself.
I focus specifically on the mixed-race singer Caroline Branchu (1780鈥1850), of Haitian heritage, who starred at the Op茅ra at the start of the nineteenth century; and the black Afro Cuban performer Maria Martinez (c.1826鈥揷.1882) who made a name for herself at the Th茅芒tre des Vari茅t茅s in the mid-century. I investigate how Branchu negotiated her aural and visual racialization by fashioning herself as a quintessentially French performer and as a key proponent of the French operatic form, the 鈥榯rag茅die lyrique鈥, and the 鈥榰rlo francese鈥 鈥 the prevailing style at the Op茅ra. I similarly consider Martinez鈥檚 own performative agency in her physical and vocal racialization and sexualization, and how Martinez dubbed herself 鈥楲a Malibran Noire鈥 鈥 a racialized counterpart to the white, Spanish singer Maria Malibran (1808鈥1836). In my conclusion, I look beyond Branchu and Martinez to Miss La La (1858鈥揷.1919), the bi-racial circus performer from Szczecin who starred at the Folies Berg猫re at the century鈥檚 end. Building on the racial dualism Martinez established between herself and the late Malibran, I consider how Miss La La and her white counterpart Kaira la Blanche (1864-1888) used their contrasting sexualized and racialized bodies to garner celebrity together, setting the scene at the Folies Berg猫re for Baker鈥檚 arrival shortly after.
Bio: Emmanuela Wroth is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at the 深夜亚洲福利久久 of Cambridge. She specializes in nineteenth-century French music theatre history and celebrity, through the intersections of race, gender, sexuality, and class. Her new project, 鈥淒iasporic Divas: Racialized and Gendered Celebrity in Western Europe, 1715鈥1925鈥, recovers the overlooked careers of black women performers and Afrodiasporic performance practices in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Western Europe and the Atlantic. Her first monograph, based on her PhD, is entitled 鈥淐ourting Celebrity: Creating the Courtesan on the Popular Parisian Stage and Beyond, 1831鈥1859鈥 (Oxford 深夜亚洲福利久久 Press, forthcoming). Her latest article appeared in French Studies, and she has book chapters in A New History of Theatre in France (Cambridge 深夜亚洲福利久久 Press, 2024) and Women鈥檚 Innovations in Theatre, Dance, and Performance (Bloomsbury, forthcoming). Previously, Emmanuela held a Postdoctoral Fellowship at the 深夜亚洲福利久久 of Toronto and completed a Collaborative Doctoral Project at Durham 深夜亚洲福利久久 and the Bowes Museum. She was a 2021 finalist on the AHRC TV PhD scheme at the Edinburgh Fringe festival and has disseminated her research on podcasts, including ArtyParti. Emmanuela is an Associate Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, and teaches a variety of courses on music history, Francophone culture, and theatre.
School of Film, Music and Theatre
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