![]() ![]() Marie Antoinette’s exploits at the glittering court of Versailles, coupled with her dramatic fall from grace during the French Revolution, have inspired numerous silver screen adaptations, from a 1938 film starring Norma Shearer to Sofia Coppola’s sympathetic 2006 biopic. … they had sent her back to Austria or put her in a convent,” she would be far less famous.Įmilia Schüle as Marie Antoinette and Louis Cunningham as Louis XVIĬaroline Dubois - Capa Drama / Banijay Studios France / Les Gens / Canal+ ![]() “It seems like an almost gratuitous action on the part of the revolutionaries. She’s just the wife of the king of France, and yet she’s put to death,” says Catriona Seth, a historian and literary scholar at the University of Oxford. Depicted alternatively as a materialistic, self-absorbed young woman who ignored her people’s suffering a more benign figure who was simply out of her depth and a feminist scapegoat for men’s mistakes, she continues to captivate in large part because of her tragic fate. Approximately 230 years after Marie Antoinette’s execution by guillotine at the hands of revolutionaries, the French queen remains one of history’s most recognizable royals. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |