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-   -   Fifty Years Later, Paris (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/fifty-years-later-paris-1154963/)

MmePerdu Nov 19th, 2016 01:40 PM

Fifty Years Later, Paris
 
This isn't quite a trip report, but a look at my visit this year in 5 parts (+2 outside the city) to commemorate my first time in Paris, 50 years ago. I hope you enjoy it.

http://www.travelgumbo.com/blog/port...rs-later-paris

FuryFluffy Nov 19th, 2016 02:17 PM

Beautiful photos, MmePerdu. I envy you to visit Paris in 20216... I must have been stardust by then.

MmePerdu Nov 19th, 2016 02:20 PM

Thanks for the catch FuryFluffy! It will be remedied immediately.

Macross Nov 19th, 2016 05:12 PM

Wow, I am very impressed. You must have been a very talented dancer.
I love your pictures.

TPAYT Nov 19th, 2016 06:41 PM

The format of your blog is wonderful and I really loved your photos. I spent quite a long time savoring them. You have an excellent way of capturing the feeling of a place. Thanks for sharing.

tuscanlifeedit Nov 19th, 2016 07:54 PM

Lovely. Thank you.

MmePerdu Nov 19th, 2016 08:20 PM

Macross, TPAYT, tuscanlifeedit - thank you. They're fun to do.

swandav2000 Nov 19th, 2016 09:08 PM

Thank you SO much for sharing your memories and your pictures of Paris!

I can relate. I lived in Paris in 1977-78. I lived in a maid's room, with the toilet & shower down the hall. The refrigerator was the window sill. Today, I wonder how I survived it.

Of course, that experience shaped me a lot, as you note. Remember what Hemingway said -- Paris is that Moveable Feast that never leaves you. I live in Europe now and cannot imagine living any other place.

s

MmePerdu Nov 19th, 2016 09:43 PM

Swandav, I had the same refrigerator. And "down the hall" would have been a major improvement for me. It does keep things in perspective, doesn't it, as long as we remember to remember.

WoinParis Nov 20th, 2016 05:24 AM

My first time in Paris my aunt had no fridge.
Lovely report mmeperdue.

denisea Nov 20th, 2016 07:38 AM

Thanks Madame...I. have been waiting for your posts on the covered passages!

MmePerdu Nov 20th, 2016 07:47 AM

Denisea, hope they were worth the wait. I want to get back and see more of them.

StCirq Nov 20th, 2016 09:19 AM

Beautiful report, Mme. Merci bien.

MmePerdu Nov 20th, 2016 09:23 AM

Thank you for saying so, StCirq. I appreciate it.

travelchat Nov 20th, 2016 05:42 PM

MmePerdu
Marvelous! So enjoying your wonderful photos, especially those of Passage Jouffroy with the magical Hotel Chopin where I stayed on my last trip to Paris. Also had a couple crepe dinners in the Passage Panoramas across the way. The passages of Paris are so much fun to seek out and explore.

MmePerdu Nov 20th, 2016 06:02 PM

Hi Travelchat, I've thought about staying at the Hotel Chopin but never managed it for one reason or another. This was the first time I'd actually seen it. What made it magic?

tomarkot Nov 20th, 2016 06:09 PM

MmePerdu, thanks for sharing your wonderful memories of Paris! Your photos inspire us to check out some of the passages.

MmePerdu Nov 20th, 2016 06:14 PM

Excellent, tomarkot! My work is done.

Scootoir Nov 20th, 2016 06:31 PM

Just started to read and the first photo is a 2cv--car of my dreams. Mr. Wonderful might want a Lamborghini but I dream of a 2cv. Looking forward to reading MmePerdu.

ms_go Nov 20th, 2016 06:35 PM

I'm enjoying your posts and photos--thanks for sharing! I visited Paris a number of times between ages 15 and 35, but then there was a bit of a gap. We just returned from a quick but very enjoyable visit last week. We spent last Saturday morning seeking out and exploring some of the same passages, so it was fun to relive that so soon through your photos. And, of course, I've picked up a few ideas for the next trip.

MmePerdu Nov 20th, 2016 06:45 PM

Scootoir, that 2cv represents the one I loved in '66 that belonged to a co-worker. I swore I'd get one one day. Well, I haven't, but still love them.

Ms_go, so many passages, so little time.

Scootoir Nov 20th, 2016 07:09 PM

Lovely stories and photos MmePerdu. Thank you for sharing them. How exciting that must have been to be a dancer in Paris.

Many years ago I was driven around Reading, England in a 2cv while trying to arrange a job exchange that ultimately fell through. Loved that car and the gear shift coming straight out of the dash.

MmePerdu Nov 20th, 2016 07:23 PM

My friend's 2cv had no back on the passenger seat, just the metal frame so was torture. But I loved it anyway. That must say something, not sure what.

justineparis Nov 20th, 2016 11:33 PM

I enjoyed your photos very much.. often they would make me sigh.. just the memories they can evoke..

travelchat Nov 21st, 2016 07:38 AM

MmePerdu:
The magic began in the walk down the Passage Jouffroy all the way to the rear where the entrance to Hotel Chopin is. Stepping up and into the minuscule lobby with that piano gave me an other worldly sensation of stepping back in time.

Then it was up the winding stairs with Sandrine the Receptionist who welcomed me so warmly and carried my luggage, down the hall to the tiny elevator, up to the fourth floor, around a corner, down four steps and up another four steps before arriving at the room I had requested with the red toile de juoy wallpaper and window overlooking the rooftops.

Add to all this the antique orange juice machine chugging away each morning in the tiny breakfast room as a backdrop to gentle conversation in several languages and there you have it - the quintessential French experience which I call magic!

I've stayed at many hotels in Paris starting with our first one in Pigalle on Blvd. Rochechouart in 1969 to the Intercontinental Opera most recently, but the Hotel Chopin is in its own unique category - that being quite simply - magic.

MmePerdu Nov 21st, 2016 08:00 AM

Travelchat, thanks for that, I'll try again next visit. Time to escape old habits.

I think sometimes, justineparis, the memories can be better than in the moment, distilled.

PalenQ Nov 21st, 2016 09:26 AM

Thanks for jogging memories of my first visit to Paris a bit after yours- ah the Deux Chevaux was everywhere -now a collector's item.

lrock5 Nov 22nd, 2016 05:35 AM

I loved your report. We will be back in Paris for 12 nights in June and plan to explore the passages. Merci Bien!

MmePerdu Nov 22nd, 2016 12:37 PM

Thanks PQ & Irock. It makes me happy people enjoy it.

MaineGG Nov 22nd, 2016 12:54 PM

Wow, Madame. I'm just catching up reading here and so enjoyed your beautiful reminiscences about your adventure in Paris fifty years ago. My first visit to Paris was in 1962. We were treated to a show at the Lido where Line Renaud was performing. It must have been very exciting to work at the Casino de Paris. And thank you also for your pieces on the passages which I still have on my "Paris Next Time" list. Your photos are wonderful too. Merci!

MmePerdu Nov 22nd, 2016 03:30 PM

I didn't know Line was at the Lido. She was in Las Vegas at the Dunes for a couple of years prior to the '66 Casino show. Very interesting. She has a website, should it interest you.

Mathieu Nov 23rd, 2016 10:24 AM

A lovely reason to return to this beautiful city and a wonderfully documented memoire. Your photographs are very nice, and having just returned from Paris a month ago after my 6th visit (the first was when I was 13), I can completely relate to the images and sentiments you've shared with us.

Nicely done and thank you.

MmePerdu Nov 27th, 2016 10:23 AM

Thanks so much, Mathieu. Paris isn't a place one tires of, is it. I know that if I'm not enjoying myself on any given day, it's me, not the city.

Mathieu Dec 8th, 2016 11:48 AM

It certainly isn't a place one tires of easily, MmePerdu. Even after spending long stretches of time there, I still find neighbourhoods that are new to me, or ones I've visited that have experienced interesting transformations to make them different and even new to me.

I recently saw the (wonderful) movie "Arrival" which challenges our ability to think in non-linear terms as a way of altering our experiences and perceptions. I think that if we can even slightly apply that kind of thinking to our travel expectations, we can visit the same place many times and yet each experience will be quite different. Sometimes I think of Paris that way.
Turning the popular saying on its head: "Plus c'est la meme chose, plus ca change.." ;)

MmePerdu Dec 8th, 2016 12:35 PM

Thanks for the movie tip, Mathieu. I've added it to my Netflix queue.


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