Friday, October 26, 2018

Rosa Bouglione - a must-share obituary from the Times this morning

Rosa Bouglione obituary
Queen of the French circus whose troupe travelled with 30 horses, 12 elephants, ten lions, six tigers and a polar bear
October 26 2018, 12:01am, The Times

At the centre of Rosa Bouglione’s apartment in Paris lay one of her most beloved possessions: a leopard-skin rug with head still attached. “That’s Mickey,” she would say to visitors. “He died of old age. We had him a long time.”
With her sparkling diamonds, a dash of red lipstick and her once-dark hair swept up in an elegant bun, Bouglione was the matriarch of five generations of a famous French circus family. She once hosted Maria Callas, the soprano, on stage at the theatre the family ran — the enormous Cirque d’Hiver (Winter Circus), which had several thousand seats. However, as Callas got too close to Bouglione’s husband, Joseph, she was almost crushed by an elephant. “The elephant practically knocked her over,” she recalled. “He was jealous.”
Bouglione was regularly sought out to talk about her adventures around the world with her husband and their circus. They toured constantly. On one trip to Brazil, during which they were accompanied by 30 horses, ten lions, six tigers and a polar bear, there was a storm at sea and the captain almost resorted to having the 12 elephants thrown overboard. “That was an adventure,” she said.

On another occasion she had to smuggle a baby gorilla into her hotel room in a hat box. “Gosh. Madame’s hats are pretty heavy,” she recalled the doorman saying . The gorilla went on to make hammocks out of the hotel curtains and developed a taste for wine, but was undetected by staff for a month. Bouglione also had a bad-tempered parrot, Coco, who lived to the age of 45 and spoke in a stream of foul language.
Often nicknamed “the undisputed queen of the circus”, Bouglione still went to matinees even after she had retired from running performances. “The shows got bigger and the children got bigger but I got smaller,” she said.
She was born Rosalie van Been in the back of a horse-drawn caravan in Belgium in 1910. Her father, Jules, was an animal trainer with the family outfit, Ménagerie van Been, and toured Europe with his wife, Gina (née Penetenti), and their snakes, bears and lions. In her teens Rosa performed the snake dance while her father controlled the lions. Aged 17, she fell in love with Joseph Bouglione, who had grown up training big cats. They married in a lion’s cage. The pastor chose to stay outside.
They spent their honeymoon working with the Wild West show, which had been set up by the bison hunter turned showman Buffalo Bill Cody. In 1934 they returned to France to run the Cirque d’Hiver, which Joseph bought with his three brothers. They lived at the circus and had seven children: Odette, Josette, Firmin, Emilien, Sandrine, Sampion and Joseph. They all joined the troupe. And all except Sandrine survive her.
During the Second World War the cirque was allowed to continue under Nazi occupation and the family hid their Romany origins behind their Italian name. Yet over the years Bouglione recalled that they faced disapproval for their gipsy roots. “People said we’d steal children.” she said, “but we never did. We had our own children, we didn’t need to steal children.”
In the 1950s Bouglione began to organise acts rather than perform in them. The circus hosted live television specials with singers such as Josephine Baker and Callas alongside acrobats and animals. In 2011 Bouglione published her memoirs, Un mariage dans la cage aux lions: la grande saga du cirque Bouglione (A wedding in the lions’ cage: the great saga of the Bouglione circus). In interviews she would call on her son Emilien, who was by then in his eighties, as her “memory aid”.
She put her longevity down to hard work, to sleeping very little and to deadly animals. “I’ve always, always been with lions, with panthers, with wolves, with hyenas,” she said. “I was never scared.” Her funeral took place in the Cirque d’Hiver. With 55 descendants, she often said that “as long as there are children, there will be circus”.
Rosa Bouglione, circus matriarch, was born on December 21, 1910. She died on August 26, 2018, aged 107


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