Post-It !

Rugby favorites

AddThis Social Bookmark Button
AddThis Feed Button

Photo Roll

Who are you ?

My, Myself & I... on the web...

6 Not so rugby

A tribute to "Contrechamp" (part 1) : O'Brother


Introducing a series of notes aiming to bridge between rugby history and cinema !

This is a tribute to my dearest friend Sandrine, to celebrate her new online initiative Contrechamp-Media.

Sandrine is an avid cinemaphile, smart and demanding, who shares her passion for images and movies. Her website gathers an active community of contributors and fans (I fit in this second category…)… climax being reached some nights proposing a now famous “Forbidden Quiz” (I am desperately poor at that game…) 

Just bookmark and enjoy… to the only condition that you can read French ! otherwise “Google” will (try to…) translate it for you... Sandrine please forgive me… your sharp writting is being slaughtered...       

And now, Ladies and Gentlemen, a Tribute to "Contrechamp” (part 1) : O’Brother

 

Brotherhood today… Here are two French brothers who have both excelled in their respective field… rugby and cinema…

On the right, the rugger, the elder Maurice Leuvielle.

Maurice became a key player of Stade Bordelais during this glorious decade before WW1 when Bordeaux  was the undisputed leader of French rugby. Maurice participated to six Championship finals in a row... between 1906 and 1911, winning four. He was leading the 1910-1911 team which remained undefeated all along the season.

Maurice Leuvielle also earned 7 caps with Equipe the France. In my picture, he is captaining the 1914 French side against England in Colombes (Lowe, Poulton… on the English side…). Some pictures and details are here… one of the last international games before the War…

On the left, the movie star, the younger Gabriel Leuvielle, better known as Max Linder .

Max Linder wrote, directed or acted in about 500 movies between 1905 and 1925 in Paris, Chicago (with Charles Chaplin at Essanay Studios…) and L.A. (Douglas Fairbank was a friend of him…).

He created this character of a charming French dandy, silk hat and butter gloves, who later influenced the greatest comic actors … Charlie Chaplin, Harold Loyd or… the Marx Brothers. He was both a very inventive filmmaker and a great actor, in a time when most actors were outrageously “over-acting” like in a vaudeville theather

Max Linder, “the pioneer of all movie comedians”, was the first real international movie star, travelling all over Europe and America… in 1912, he was the most paid actor in the world… no less !

The bottom picture (credit to British Film Institue) shows Chaplin and Linder acting together in the early 1920s. Chaplin once dedicated a movie to Linder with these words “To the unique Max, the great master – his student Chaplin”.

Nevetheless, Max Linder’s life ended as a tragedy. During WW1, Linder was seriously wounded by gas attack and invalided out of service. He never recovered health… and comitted suicide with his young wife in 1925.

Most of his movies have disappeared, but his daughter Maud Linder later did a great work to make his legacy available to the public. Just follow these links to find Max Linder’s short bio written by Maud Linder (in French / in English in "Les Indépendants du Premier Siècle"), and to find an article in “American Popular Culture” summerizing Linder’s contribution to cinema.

Enough talking ! there are some videos are on the web…

"Max Linder - King of Cinema" (documentary in English / unknown credit)

 

"Vive la vie de garçon - Troubles of a grasswidower"

That's all, folks...! I am now starting to draft "Tribute to Contrechamp" (part 2) : The Birth of A Nation...

Technorati Tags : , , ,

"Vantage Out" E.Kinsella tennis postcard...


No rugby today ! just a kind reminder that Roland Garros French Open has started !

I hope that nobody will notice that this early XXth century postcard relates more to Wimbledon lawn rather than Paris clay...

June will be a very tough month for work... starting with tennis, followed by the World Cup in Germany... really tough, indeed... (and what about the Tour de france later in July... ?)

My friend Jerôme has bet a bottle of Champagne that Martina Hingis could make it... let's wait...

PS : last year, I wrote a fairly elaborated post to explain that Roland Garros was a rugger... check it here...





Technorati Tags: ,

Roland Garros was also a Rugger...



A great "art deco" postcard (illustrated by Yves Roowy) celebrating rugby at the 1924 Olympic games in Paris.

No rugby today... My favorite team , the Stade Francais, lost his second HCup final  yesterday... Bad mood...

Having said that, there is a nice short-cut in history that enables me to a fine transition to tennis, as Roland Garros French Open starts today...

Let's make it short. Roland Garros was a Rugger... Maybe I will look later on for nice pics to illustrate it... but I have none on my computer right now...

The Stade Francais (omnisports) built this large tennis stadium in Paris Bois de Boulogne in 1927, in
order to organize the Davis Cup final after the "Musketeers" (Cochet, Brugnon, Borotra, Lacoste) won it the previous year in the US. It has been hosting the French Open since 1928 (it was previouly hosted at La Faisanderie, SF premises in the Parc de St Cloud).

At the time, Stade Francais was chaired by Emile Lesieur, a true "sportsman", who used to play winger in SF rugby team (Champion in 1908, 2 caps with France in 1906 and 1912), but also member of the
Olympic track & field team... From what I have read in the newspapers, this gentlemen was running really fast... he died 100 years old...

Emile Lesieur was an old-time friend of the aviator Roland Garros, with whom he studied at HEC (yes, the MBA...) at the beginning of the XXth century.

Following his friend Emile Lesieur, Garros joined the Stade Francais where is is recorded to have played rugby - not the A team, I admit - , and did also participate to several cycling championships...

Roland Garros was then a professional aviator in the 1910s (many of his records are listed in my previous link to EADS) and a pioneer in military aviation during WW1. He was shot down and died in october 1918, days before the war ended...

Later in the 20s, Emile Lesieur insisted strongly to have the new tennis stadium named after his friend. As it recorded : "je ne sortirai pas un sou de mes caisses si on ne donne pas à ce stade le nom
de mon ami Garros..."

You are invited to visit the the unofficial Roland Garros Blog (in French) of my blog friends Julien and Smooth ...

Technorati Tags: , , ,

Yes, it's football !

phlog photo

Sometimes collecting rugby postcards is a little frustrating because there are not too many of them...

Well, I also have some nice old football topics, such as this XIXth century valentine card...

They all look like gentlemen, don't they ?

Technorati Tags: , ,

In a while


In a while
Envoyé à l'origine par lunayoscuridad

Electro goth espagnol.... tu le crois ?

Kristin Hersh


Kristin Hersh
Envoyé à l'origine par Frederic

Pas le meilleur morceau de Kristin Hersh... mais ça trainait sur mon disque dur... appelons ça de la fidélité, en tant que ex-fan (y en a t-il 10 en France ?) des Throwing Muses depuis une vingtaine d'année... ça ne me rajeunit pas... en tout cas, j'ai toujours aimé les rock bands avec une chanteuse... !

(clip en download sur le site web de Mme Hersh, www.throwingmusic.com , sans doute libre de droits... )

Space for rent !

  • Who would like to advertise here ? Premium Content - Niche Targeted Audience - 8000 PV/month
    Baines

Translation ! Traduction !

Search this blog !

V.O.D.

  • RU v RL (French)
  • Le Grand Combat 1958

May 2008

Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
      1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31  

Recent Comments

Great books !

  • "Stade Toulousain", by B.Fabioux and H.Rozès
  • "French Rugby Football, a cultural history" by P.Dine
  • "1905 Originals", by Bob Howitt and Dianne Haworth
  • "Voyous et gentlemen, une histoire du rugby" by Jean Lacouture