Antoine De Saint Exupéry: His Life & Times, Whom Saint Exupéry Wrote Is Now 60 Years Old

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Antoine De Saint Exupéry: His Life & Times, Whom Saint Exupéry Wrote Is Now 60 Years Old ANTOINE cllnique in DE SAINT-EXUPERY f' JJ l, Ail the Worltl u ' Saint Exupérys Little Prince by Elise Pearlman o IS HAIR IS STILL A MASS OF CURLS that hug about the great house, toting a Iittle green chair his head Iike a fluffy golden halo. He is still behind him and begging to be told stories. diminutive and childlike, yet regal in his prince­ Saint Exupéry's love and talent for writing man­ HIy robes of green and red. However, despite ail ifested itself at an early age. According to Curtis appearances, the "extraordinary little man" of Cate's Antoine de Saint Exupéry: His Life & Times, whom Saint Exupéry wrote is now 60 years old. the author wrote his first poem at the tender age of The Little Prince is the best-known work of six. A year later he was already outlining his ideas Antoine de Saint Exupéry, a charismatic French­ for a five-act opera. At age 13, for a school assign­ man of aristocratic descent who was born in 1900 ment, he wrote a short story about the journey of a in Lyon, France. According to the French aviation top hat that was so good it was used as a model for magazine Icare, Saint Exupéry's "beau nom" could other students for years to come. be traced back to at least the Eleventh century. At the same time, Saint Exupéry developed a Saint Exupéry lost his father when he was only a bad habit that would follow him throughout his few years old, and his mother, Marie, was faced Iife, much to the discomfort of his friends and fa m­ with the hardship of raising five children by herself. ily. Even as a child, if he needed an audience, he She took her young family to live with her aunt, would wake his sleeping siblings. Later in life, Saint Gabrielle du Tricaud, who lived in a chateau, Saint Exupéry thought nothing of telephoning friends Maurice de Rémens in Ain, near Lyon. It was in during the middle of the night to share something this very special and sheltered environment that he had just written. Saint Exupéry, once a golden-haired Iittle prince Saint Exupéry was not the only gifted writer in himself, passed his happiest days. Nathalie des Val­ the family. As biographer Paul Webster notes, Saint lières is the author of a recently released biography Exupéry's mother, Marie, and his sister, Simone, about her great uncle called Saint Exupéry, would both eventually immortalize their days at L'archange et l'écrivain (Saint Exupéry, The Saint Maurice de Rémens in 1 H ear My Tree Archangel and the Writer). In this book, she shares Singing and Five Children in a Garden; respectively. the charming image of a very young Saint Exupéry, Saint Exupéry also became enamored with flying the future storyteller himself, following his mother at an early age, and this passion for flight would was Night Flight's pop­ Bevin, DeLamater's daughter, inherited the proper­ otherworldly little person whom he calls the Little ularity that two years ty, the house became known as the Bevin House. Ir Prince. Ir is through the Little Prince's stories of his after its publication it has been suggested that the Bevin House, located travels around the universe that the aviator learns had already been in Eaton's Neck, Long Island, inspired Saint what is truly important in life. translated into numer­ Exupéry to write his most famous story because the Saint Exupéry wrote eloquently about what ous languages and was great mansion resembled his beloved childhood causes us to become attached to others and how made into a film star­ home, Saint Maurice de Rémens. the work we put into our relationships deve10ps ring Clark Gable and Like Saint Maurice de Rémens, the Bevin House into the most cherished feelings of love and friend­ Helen Hayes. A year was a three-story mansion constructed in the Sec­ ship. His widely quoted statements that "one sees later, Courrier Sud ond Empire style, with windows adorning the front c1early only with the heart" and "what is essential is (Southern Mail) was and sides of the house, like numerous eyes looking invisible to the eye" are poetic embodiments of his made into a movie in out into the world. The Bevin House's crowning philosophy regarding matters of the heart. Saint France. feature was perhaps the French-styled sloping Exupéry had a stormy relationship with his wife, Ir is not commonly Mansard roof. From the windows in the Bevin Consuelo, who is believed by sorne to have been known that The Little House, Saint Exupéry could see Duck Island Har­ the model for the vain and capricious Rose the Lit­ Prince was written in bor, which was perhaps a gentle reminder of the tle Prince left behind on his home planet, Asteroid New York rather than Ain River, a favorite bathing spot for the Saint B-612. in Saint Exupéry's Exupéry family when they gathered in Lyon. The publishing firm of Reynal & Hitchcock was native France. Unable Whi1e in Long Island, Saint Exupéry received established when Eugene Reynal and Curtice to continue living in English les sons from Adèle Breaux, a local foreign Hitchcock joined forces in the early 1930s. The occupied France, Saint language teacher. Saint Exupéry's goal was to learn firm had hoped to publish The Little Prince in Exupéry left his enough English so that he could communicate with December 1942 and thereby capitalize on the Saint Maurice Rémens, Ain, childhood home. beloved homeland for cab drivers and find his way around Manhattan Christmas market. However, it was not until April (Courtesy of Patrick EouquereZ) . New York towards the more easily. Saint Exupéry told Breaux that the 6, 1943 that the "petit bonhomme" who had lived end of 1940. This was Bevin House was the best place he ever had for in the heart of Saint Exupéry finally made his for­ shape his career and forever change his life. a profoundly difficult time for the gifted writer, writing. Breaux later wrote about the time she mai debut. Saint Exupéry, who liked to put his According to Curtis Cate, his "baptism of the air," who had left everything of importance behind in spent with Saint Exupéry in Saint-Exupéry in Amer­ words on paper in the tranquility and solitude only his first flight in an airplane, took place at age 12 at France. As Joy D . Marie Robinson notes, this sad­ ica, 1942-1943, A Memoir. She had the privilege of night can provide, was a perfectionist. According to a small airfield near his beloved Saint Maurice de dest period of Saint Exupéry's life was perhaps his reading from the original manuscript for Le Petit his great-niece Nathalie des Vallières, he would Rémens. Saint Exupéry later became one of the most productive. In an effort to awaken the United Prince, and she was allowed to choose a keepsake rewrite each sentence many times. This meticulous pioneers of the Aéropostale, a private plane compa­ States to the plight of France in the hope that our from among the many ny that established mail routes from France to country would intervene on France's behalf, Saint discarded drawings from South America and North Africa. Because flight Exupéry did what he did best: he wrote. Saint the book. was still in its infancy and the mail routes covered Exupéry's book, Flight ta Arras (Pilote de Guerre, The Little Prince can be such difficult terrain, this was an extreme1y haz­ 1942) was based on his experience during a recon­ read on a myriad of levels ardous occupation. There were many accidents, naissance mission in war-torn France. He wrote and is arguably more a narrow escapes and, unfortunately, fatalities, but Letter ta a H ostage (Lettre à un Otage, 1942) because, book for adults than for the friends Saint Exupéry made during his years in his eyes, ail Frenchmen were hostages under children. The week of its with "la Ligne" [the Line] lasted a lifetime. Saint Hitler's regime. publication, John Cham­ Exupéry's adventures in the exciting arena of the It was during this time that the American pub­ berlain, a reviewer for the sky became the basis for several highly acc1aimed lishers Eugene Reynal and Curtice Hitchcock New York Times, accu­ and prize-winning works of fiction and nonfiction. encouraged the depressed author to write a book rately referred to The Lit­ These books inc1uded Southem Mail (Coum"er Sud, featuring the little man that Saint Exupéry con­ tle Prince as a "fable" or 1929), Night Flight (Vol de Nuit, 1931), and Wind, stantly drew when doodling on napkins and the fairy tale for adults. As in Sand, and Stars (Terre des Hommes, 1939). In margins of letters. Saint Exupéry's other France he was awarded the very prestigious Prix The author's wife, Consuelo, sought a rentai books, The L ittle Prince Fémina for Vol de Nuit (Night Flight). Wind, Sand home in the suburbs of Long Island, New York, was based on autobio­ and Stars (Terre des Hommes) received the Grand where the couple could escape the heat of Manhat­ graphical e1ements from Prix du Roman from L'Académie Française in tan. To his surprise, Saint Exupéry, who could his life. Like the aviator France; in the United States, Saint Exupéry bare1y speak a word of English, found himself living of The Little Prince, Saint received the National Book Award. As Joy D. in a house that had once been the pride and joy of Exupéry once crashed his Marie Robinson notes in her 1984 biography of the a wealthy industrialist, Cornelius DeLamater.
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