The Hotel on Place Vendome

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The Hotel on Place Vendome Page 1

by Tilar J. Mazzeo




  Dedication

  FOR EMMANUEL

  IL FAUT ÊTRE TRÈS PATIENT. . .

  JE TE REGARDERAI DU COIN DE

  L’OEIL ET TU NE DIRAS RIEN.

  Epigraph

  LUXURY STAINS EVERYONE IT TOUCHES.

  —Charles Ritz

  Contents

  Dedication

  Epigraph

  Cast of Characters

  Prologue: The Hôtel Ritz, the Mirror of Paris

  1 - This Switzerland in Paris: June 1940

  2 - All the Talk of Paris: June 1, 1898

  3 - Dogfight above the Place Vendôme: July 27, 1917

  4 - Diamonds as Big as the Ritz: September 1, 1940

  5 - The Americans Drifting to Paris: 1944

  6 - The French Actress and Her Nazi Lover

  7 - The Jewish Bartender and the German Resistance

  8 - The American Wife and the Swiss Director

  9 - The German General and the Fate of Paris

  10 - The Press Corps and the Race to Paris

  11 - Ernest Hemingway and the Ritz Liberated

  12 - Those Dame Reporters: August 26, 1944

  13 - The Last Trains from Paris

  14 - Coco’s War and Other Dirty Linen

  15 - The Blonde Bombshell and the Nuclear Scientists

  16 - From Berlin with Love and Last Battles in Paris: 1945

  17 - Waning Powers in Paris: June 1951

  18 - The War’s Long Shadow: May 29, 1969

  Afterword

  Acknowledgments

  Notes

  Selected Bibliography

  Photography Credits

  Index

  About the Author

  Also by Tilar J. Mazzeo

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  Cast of Characters

  THE HOTEL STAFF

  BLANCHE AUZELLO: Reckless and beautiful American-born, German-Jewish wife of the director of the Hôtel Ritz. She lived in Paris during the war on a forged passport and was drawn unwittingly into the secret networks of the resistance.

  CLAUDE AUZELLO: Chief director of the Hôtel Ritz, an old French soldier, skilled at catering to the whims of the rich and famous. Otherwise gravely polite, he was rash in his contempt for the hotel’s German occupiers. Unbeknownst to his wife, he was part of a second resistance network run from the kitchens of the Hôtel Ritz and under close German surveillance.

  HANS FRANZ ELMINGER: Officious German-speaking, Swiss-born deputy manager, delegated with managing day-to-day operations involving the Nazis. He was the nephew of the Hôtel Ritz president, the baron Hans von Pfyffer. Studiously neutral to all appearances, in the last summer of the war he and his wife, LUCIENNE, guarded a dangerous secret.

  MARIE-LOUISE, MADAME RITZ: Widow of the hotel’s late founder, César Ritz; she was a savvy Swiss businesswoman but frequently vain and foolish. Accompanied everywhere by two Belgian griffons, Madame Ritz despised BLANCHE AUZELLO, who ardently returned the favor.

  CHARLES “CHARLEY” RITZ: Son of MARIE-LOUISE and the hotel’s eponymous founder, César Ritz; a passionate sportsman, reluctant hotelier, and drinking buddy of ERNEST HEMINGWAY.

  FRANK MEIER: Legendary bartender at the rue Cambon side bar at the Hôtel Ritz, inventor of some of the most famous classic cocktails of the 1930s; one-quarter Jewish, Austrian-born, and active in the resistance. The informal post office run from behind Frank’s bar was known to both French and German intelligence operatives. His second-in-command and successor was barman GEORGES SCHEUER.

  MONSIEUR SÜSS: The Swiss assistant director of the Ritz who played both sides against the middle. With Claude Auzello, he worked to circumvent German air raid regulations and to aid the Allies; with the Germans, he colluded in looting the cultural patrimony of Paris.

  OLIVIER DABESCAT: Waiter, maître d’hôtel, and MARCEL PROUST’S chatty informer. Stern, precise, cool, and forbidding, he was the final arbiter of social prestige at the Hôtel Ritz and, in the eyes of those who feared him, one of the silent powers behind the thrones of Europe.

  AUGUSTE ESCOFFIER: One of the Hôtel Ritz’s cofounders and the greatest chef of the twentieth century, he introduced the modern menu and made it possible for women to dine in public. The French actress SARAH BERNHARDT was his on-again, off-again lover and his greatest passion.

  THE GERMANS

  REICHSMARSCHALL HERMANN GÖRING: The morphine-addicted, flamboyantly excessive, and often ludicrous German air force general, Hermann Göring spent much of the war at the Hôtel Ritz pillaging art, running the Nazi war machine, and desperately trying to avoid the brutal rages of ADOLF HITLER, who blamed his second-in-command for failing to secure world domination.

  COLONEL HANS SPEIDEL: German colonel who occupied various chief-of-staff positions in occupied Paris. Responsible in the early years of the occupation for overseeing the daily administration of the Hôtel Ritz in Paris, he was later part of Operation Valkyrie, the doomed summer plot to assassinate ADOLF HITLER.

  CARL-HEINRICH VON STÜLPNAGEL: Military commander of occupied Paris; with his cousin LIEUTENANT COLONEL CAESAR VON HOFACKER, central players in the failed Operation Valkyrie.

  CAESAR VON HOFACKER: With his cousin CARL-HEINRICH VON STÜLPNAGEL, one of the architects in Paris of the failed Operation Valkyrie.

  HANS GÜNTHER VON DINCKLAGE: Charming, forty-something German diplomat, best known for his success with the ladies and his scandalous wartime liaison with fashion designer COCO CHANEL. Resident playboy spy of the Hôtel Ritz, he was a man of uncertain loyalties.

  HANS-JÜRGEN SOEHRING: German Luftwaffe officer and wartime lover of the famous French film star ARLETTY.

  DIETRICH VON CHOLTITZ: In charge of Paris during the last days of the occupation, the German general who defied ADOLF HITLER and refused to burn Paris—perhaps not entirely out of altruism.

  WILHELM CANARIS: Head of the German intelligence offices at the Abwehr in Paris, he played a dark game of counterintelligence as a British double agent until his discovery and arrest in the winter of 1944.

  ARNO BREKER: “Hitler’s Michelangelo” and a card-carrying member of the Nazi Party, he hobnobbed in the Paris art world during the 1920s and 1930s, becoming friends with JEAN COCTEAU and PABLO PICASSO, for whom his wife, Demetra, modeled. In 1942, he returned to occupied Paris for a celebrated art exhibit during the season that became the high-water mark of collaboration.

  THE POLITICIANS

  GENERAL CHARLES DE GAULLE: Cantankerous, patriotic leader of the Free French government-in-exile, whose views of the liberation of Paris were increasingly at odds with the military strategies of the Allies in that last summer of 1944.

  WINSTON CHURCHILL: Eloquent and posh wartime prime minister of Great Britain and frequent Hôtel Ritz denizen, he knew COCO CHANEL from summers on the French Riviera. Increasingly exasperated with the obstreperous CHARLES DE GAULLE, WINSTON CHURCHILL would have much preferred GEORGES MANDEL in the French leadership and didn’t mind saying so in the last days of the occupation.

  GEORGES MANDEL: Sartorially challenged Jewish-born journalist and former French minister, he was a long-term resident of the Hôtel Ritz and persuaded MARIE-LOUISE RITZ at the fall of France to keep the hotel’s doors open. Arrested early in the war and incarcerated as a prisoner by the Germans, his execution sealed the fate of his ancient archrival.

  PIERRE LAVAL: Chain-smoking chief minister of the French government established at Vichy during the Nazi period; a brutal pragmatist and arch-collaborator, often found at the Hôtel Ritz. He amassed great personal power and was responsible for the deportation of Jewish children from France but claimed he was only a “trustee in bankruptcy.”

  PAUL MORAND:
French diplomat and writer, friend of COCO CHANEL, JEAN COCTEAU, and MARCEL PROUST, he was the PRINCESS SOUTZO’s secret lover and later husband; under her influence, he took the side of Vichy France during the occupation.

  THE AMERICAN WAR PERSONNEL AND CORRESPONDENTS

  ROBERT CAPA: Courageous, charismatic, and dangerously handsome Hungarian-born American war photographer, he quarreled bitterly with ERNEST HEMINGWAY in the days before the liberation of Paris. INGRID BERGMAN’s lover, he was part of the complicated tangle of loyalties and betrayals that ended ERNEST HEMINGWAY’s third marriage.

  MARTHA GELLHORN: American war correspondent and ERNEST HEMINGWAY’s third wife, she was vivacious, witty, fiercely independent, and the unknowing target of MARLENE DIETRICH’s devious sexual jealousy.

  LEE MILLER: Famously beautiful American photographer and war correspondent for Vogue, friend of PABLO PICASSO; like American journalist HELEN KIRKPATRICK, she reported on the liberation of Paris.

  MARY WELSH: A perky and cute American “dame” journalist with a penchant for frank talk and for going braless under tight sweaters. She had a wartime affair with ERNEST HEMINGWAY at the Hôtel Ritz and went on to become the fourth wife of the famous writer. Cozy with MARLENE DIETRICH but scorned by ROBERT CAPA, she, too, reported firsthand on the liberation of Paris.

  HENRY WOODRUM: Shot down during a daytime air raid over Paris in the weeks before the liberation, the American pilot was the only man known to have “walked out” of the occupied capital. Hunted by the Gestapo, he had French citizens to thank for his unprecedented survival.

  FRED WARDENBURG: Career executive at Du Pont in chemical manufacturing, he was called upon in the days after the liberation to become the scientific James Bond of his generation—and to join the undercover wing of the Manhattan Project in Paris in the race to prevent the Germans from developing nuclear weapons.

  IRWIN SHAW: Novelist, playwright, journalist, and unlucky lover, he was the man who introduced his girlfriend MARY WELSH to the macho ERNEST HEMINGWAY. Later, he footed the bill while ROBERT CAPA made love to INGRID BERGMAN in a newly liberated Paris.

  JAMES GAVIN: Lieutenant general in the United States Army, “Jumpin’ Jim” found himself caught up in 1945 between his passion for MARTHA GELLHORN and the stratagem of a determined MARLENE DIETRICH.

  THE WRITERS

  MARCEL PROUST: Nervous, twitchy, eccentric, and brilliant, he wrote what many consider the greatest novel in the world—and made the Hôtel Ritz his truest home in the process.

  JEAN COCTEAU: Opium-addicted and wildly talented, a writer, artist, and filmmaker who tried to save some Jewish friends from deportation but respected ADOLF HITLER; an old friend of COCO CHANEL, MARCEL PROUST, SACHA GUITRY, and ARLETTY. His were the sins of neutrality.

  JEAN-PAUL SARTRE AND SIMONE DE BEAUVOIR: France’s mismatched celebrity intellectual couple, they enjoyed heavy drinking at the Hôtel Ritz in ERNEST HEMINGWAY’s bedroom. SIMONE DE BEAUVOIR and “Papa” sometimes did a bit more than just drinking, and hotel staff noted her leaving the hotel looking suspiciously rumpled in the morning.

  SACHA GUITRY: Renowned French playwright and screenwriter; the witty, flamboyant darling of Paris, he blithely pursued his own pleasure and frivolity at the Hôtel Ritz with no regard for politics or the human consequences.

  F. SCOTT FITZGERALD: Voice of the Jazz Age and celebrated American author; the Hôtel Ritz bar was his favorite watering hole during his descent into alcoholism.

  ERNEST HEMINGWAY: American novelist and celebrated adventurer, known for his macho exploits and terse sentences. He and his rogue band of “irregulars” liberated the Hôtel Ritz—and many bottles of vintage wine from its cellars—in the last hours of the occupation. “Papa” then made the Hôtel Ritz home for months to follow, in a new, American-style deluxe occupation.

  THE FILM STARS AND THE GLITTERATI

  ARLETTY: Sultry French film star and national celebrity, she passed the war in luxury at the Hôtel Ritz with her German lover, HANS-JÜRGEN SOEHRING. Her “horizontal collaboration” earned her the dangerous hatred of many in occupied Paris and a terrible retribution.

  SARAH BERNHARDT: Known the world over simply as “the divine Sarah,” she was the stage legend of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and the friend and lover of the Hôtel Ritz’s founding chef, AUGUSTE ESCOFFIER.

  ELSA MAXWELL: Brash, pudgy, and distinctly unattractive, she was the lesbian midwestern American girl who took over-the-top partying to new heights in the 1920s and found herself one of the acknowledged queens of high society, all from her start in the salons of the Hôtel Ritz.

  LAURA MAE CORRIGAN: Disdained by many at home in the United States as a nasty gold digger, the pretty young waitress found herself a man with a vast fortune and a cardiac condition. When he exited the scene early, she lived in splendor between London and the grandest suite at the Hôtel Ritz in Paris—until the Second World War started and she had to make a brave decision.

  DUKE AND DUCHESS OF WINDSOR: Better known as the former King Edward VIII of Great Britain and the American divorcée Mrs. Wallis Simpson, their love story made headlines. Behind the scenes, their pro-fascist sympathies caused considerable consternation.

  LUISA, MARQUISE CASATI: Staggeringly rich, famously extravagant, possibly unbalanced, the marquise turned her life into a uniquely modernist kind of performance art; in Paris of the 1910s and 1920s, the Hôtel Ritz was her favorite background setting.

  ALEXANDRE ROSENBERG: The cultivated twenty-four-year-old son of the Jewish art dealer whose gallery was at the epicenter of artistic Paris, he fought for the Free French Forces under Charles de Gaulle from Britain. In August 1944, he returned to Paris as an officer in the liberation and made an astonishing discovery on one of the last German trains fleeing the capital.

  PRINCESS SOUTZO: Beautiful, calculating, flirtatious, and ultimately pro-German, the married princess was MARCEL PROUST’s last great passion and coolly played the writer off his friend PAUL MORAND in the final days of the First World War.

  MARLENE DIETRICH: German-born Hollywood film legend, she boosted Allied troop morale at the end of the war with military tours but called the Hôtel Ritz home. She was a friend of ERNEST HEMINGWAY and became MARTHA GELLHORN’s sworn enemy.

  COCO CHANEL: Aging French fashion designer and longtime resident of the Hôtel Ritz, her flagship boutique was across the street on rue Cambon. She closed her fashion house during the war and lived at the Hôtel Ritz with her German lover, HANS VON DINCKLAGE. Questioned by the British, French, and American governments after the liberation about her dubious and illicit wartime activities, she quipped that, given the chance of a lover at her age, she wasn’t going to ask to see his passport.

  JOSÉE, COUNTESS DE CHAMBRUN: Daughter of French collaborator PIERRE LAVAL and wartime socialite, often seen at the Hôtel Ritz during the occupation. Friends with COCO CHANEL, ARLETTY, and SACHA GUITRY, she was a film industry “angel” and used her influence with the Germans.

  INGRID BERGMAN: Swedish movie star who played opposite Humphrey Bogart in the wartime classic Casablanca, she fell in love with a restless ROBERT CAPA at the Hôtel Ritz in the months after the liberation of Paris.

  Prologue: The Hôtel Ritz, the Mirror of Paris

  German troops and French civilians, 1940.

  OF COURSE GREAT HOTELS HAVE ALWAYS BEEN SOCIAL IDEAS, FLAWLESS MIRRORS TO THE PARTICULAR SOCIETIES THEY SERVICE.

  —Joan Didion, The White Album, 1979

  This book did not begin on the beautiful Place Vendôme. It did not even begin in Paris. This book first took shape, instead, one winter afternoon in the former eastern zone of Berlin, in a friend’s apartment overlooking the Alexanderplatz.

  I was poring over a thick photocopied stack of British and French government documents on the wartime activities of the fashion designer Coco Chanel as we talked. Over and over again in declassified correspondence describing intelligence coming in from occupied Paris, I read the name of the Hôtel Ritz and its alter
nately famous and infamous residents. Some of those residents were high-ranking German officers and their Axis counterparts. Some were wealthy French civilians, some American. Many were spies with dizzyingly complicated loyalties and dangerous secrets. There, in opulent splendor, they all lived cheek by jowl on the Place Vendôme, bound up together in a complicated dance in a divided Europe.

  What, I wondered aloud to my German friend that afternoon, was the story of those who lived in this renowned hotel during the occupation of Paris? How did what happened, over champagne cocktails and white-linen dinner tables, in the corridors and palatial suites and basement kitchens, shape the lives of those who met there by chance or assignation—and, more importantly, how did it shape the lives of thousands of others? How did it shape France and the course of our shared, tangled, pan-European twenty-first century?

  These men and women, coming from all sides of their century’s greatest conflict, were caught up together in the eddy of history. For a couple of hundred people in the course of the war, life went on—and sometimes life ended—inside the walls of a palace that was already part of the cultural legend that was modern Paris. What happened there, when the Hôtel Ritz was a crossroad of international power, would change each of them. They, together, would change the history of our last century. This book is the story of that moving and remarkable history, in all its alternately inspiring and terrifying human complexity and drama.

  Paris in the 1940s is a whole lifetime ago now. It was a world where women in satin evening gowns smoked cigarettes from long ivory holders and men still wore fedoras. A world where bellhops in caps whisked away fur stoles and chauffeurs waited on street corners while jazz singers crooned in late-night cabarets on Montmartre.

  It is the past now. But for many there is no way to leave the past behind. And so, in some essential ways, this is also the story of our present moment. We all live in the long shadow of this history.

  In the dining rooms of the grand hotel, the outward trappings of the war and its treacheries were suspended—at least on the surface. German officers during the occupation set aside their uniforms and, more often than not, French was the language of conversation. The Parisians who dined with them adopted a pose of studied neutrality in exchange for their pleasures. Over “roundtable” luncheons, the economics of collaboration were hammered out among designers, industrialists, diplomats, and politicians. Those conversations at the Hôtel Ritz laid the foundations for the establishment of today’s European Union.

 

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