Share your favorites on Show & Tell

"Madame Bovary" (1949) and the "Gigi" Furniture

In Furniture > Show & Tell and Movies > Show & Tell.
Furniture1 of 14272Circa 1910 Stickley Oak Partners DeskA little 1850's/60's Jenny Lind eye candy.
8
Love it
0
Like it

jbingham95jbingham95 loves this.
jscott0363jscott0363 loves this.
LeelaniLeelani loves this.
sherrilousherrilou loves this.
NewfldNewfld loves this.
vcalvcal loves this.
dav2no1dav2no1 loves this.
fortapachefortapache loves this.
See 6 more
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 8 months ago

    keramikos
    (26 items)

    I've seen 1949's "Madame Bovary before, and indeed knew that a piece of the "Gigi" Louis XVI-style furniture set puts in an appearance in it, but a recent viewing revealed something I hadn't previously noticed.

    In an early scene, new bride Emma Bovary is shopping for home furnishings, and discovers an exquisite piece of upholstery fabric. In the same scene, you see an unupholstered chair that she's already selected.

    In the next scene, you see the chair upholstered with the exquisite upholstery.

    Who on the staff of this 1949 film loved that upholstery fabric enough to have a sample made so that it would seem like the chair had been freshly upholstered with it?

    Insofar as I can tell, the common denominator between "Madame Bovary," and "Gigi" is director Vincente Minnelli.

    The "Gigi" furniture puts in an appearance in at least one other Minnelli film, 1962's "Two Weeks in Another Town." That movie is a prime example of a film that can have all kinds of great resources (director, actors, etc), but still be a flop.

    I don't know exactly what all went wrong; however, Minnelli himself was quoted as saying, "It's painful to talk about the ruin of that film even now."

    REFERENCES:

    Images one through three are low-tech captures made by me from a recent viewing of "Madame Bovary" on Turner Classic Movies.

    Image four is from the archive dot org digital copy of the 1970 MGM auction catalog:

    https://archive.org/details/19700503-mgm-auction-catalog-copy/page/n7/mode/1up

    Madame Bovary (1949)

    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0041615/

    Gigi (1958)

    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0051658/

    Two Weeks in Another Town (1962)

    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0056625/

    Vincente Minnelli quotes

    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0591486/quotes/

    logo
    Furniture
    See all
    Vintage Antique Style Square Clear Glass Inkwell Bottle ink
    Vintage Antique Style Square Clear ...
    $13
    Antique Trunk & Chest-Restoration Hardware-Leather Handles & Fasteners--U-Kit
    Antique Trunk & Chest-Restoration H...
    $31
    1894 Peacock Series Evening Hydrangea Vintage French Nouveau Art Poster Print
    1894 Peacock Series Evening Hydrang...
    $10
    Vintage Antique Style Shifter Knob Handle Metal Walking Stick Cane
    Vintage Antique Style Shifter Knob ...
    $35
    logo
    Vintage Antique Style Square Clear Glass Inkwell Bottle ink
    Vintage Antique Style Square Clear ...
    $13
    See all

    Comments

    1. Newfld Newfld, 8 months ago
      Amazing to find they reused this furniture in so many movies, I think the bird pattern is especially beautiful

      (BTW that movie Madame Bovary with Jennifer Jones was terrific, it was on a binge repeat TV channel when I was a kid & my mom didn't want me to watch it because of the adultery theme - so of course I binge watched it when she wasn't around lol :))
    2. keramikos, 8 months ago
      Newfld, I think it's beautiful, too. <3

      Oddly enough, though, the one thing that might break my obsession with this furniture set would be to find out that the design on the upholstery was painted rather than embroidered.

      Yeah, painted fabric was a thing.

      One of the few people still alive who would know the answer to that question is Leslie Caron.

      As to binge-watching old movies: I did that when I was very young. I would watch the late show, the late late show, and the early show on weekends and during the non-school months.

      My poor, long-suffering mother would come out into the living room around midnight, squint at me, the clock, and the television. Then she'd turn down the sound on the latter, and go back to bed. };-)

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.