Paris: Love Blooms Eternal in the City of Light

Paris: Love Blooms Eternal in the City of Light

“We’ll always have Paris.” Those iconic words uttered by Bogart to Bergman in Casablanca so many years ago are just as true and meaningful today.  Maybe even more so.  You see the city has created something called Paris Tourist Day, meant to encourage Parisians to adopt a more cordial view of tourists.  Launched a few years ago – and acknowledging that an estimated two million jobs here are linked to tourism - this project looks to become a regular fixture.  This lesson in Parisian etiquette includes the vow to take the time to give information to visitors and to attempt to reply to them in their own language.  Merci!

A Cimetiere Extraordinaire

On a recent visit to Paris, I came with a check list of all the “must-dos” that I hadn’t done in the past.  At the top of this list was to visit a cemetery.  No, not just any cemetery - the Pere Lachaise Cemetery with its starry lineup of illustrious corpses - indeed the celebrity resting place in Paris. My visit, surprisingly, had a touch of romantic history to it because I visited the graves of old-timers such as Delacroix, Proust and Bizet, as well as the more recent dearly departed Jim Morrison, and that famous love duo: Simone Signoret and Yves Montand.  Opened since the 1790s, Pere Lachaise was designed as a public park and still today is a green and pleasant, albeit somewhat somber place to wander. With the help of a map supplied upon entering, one can check out the sites of almost anyone French, talented and dead - they’re all here.

Bubbles in a Glass of Champagne

That evening, local friends, knowing my love for romance, luxury and the great American songbook, suggested we visit the very elegant Georges V Hotel (www.fourseasons.com/paris).  An acquaintance of theirs, Flavien Compagnon, sings and plays piano in the Georges V cocktail lounge, and, turns out, the entertainer’s love of Cole Porter and George Gershwin matched mine exactly.  Sitting on a burgundy velvet banquet, sipping some bubbly, the room low-lit by crystal chandeliers and fragrant votives, and with floor to ceiling windows giving onto a perfect formal garden in the distance, it was a pinch-myself, dreamy moment.

Four Seasons Paris view

Twinkle, Twinkle Eiffel Tower

Departing this grand hotel, my friends had a perfect nightcap idea to end the evening: a visit to La Tour Eiffel. We timed it just right.  Moments after we arrived at this most iconic symbol of Paris, the Tower began to do its thing - The Great Eiffel Tower Light-Up!  Back on New Year’s Eve, 1999 to mark the new millennium, 20,000 light bulbs were added to the tower and illuminated.  And because we all like things that sparkle, the tower continues to be lit up every night for 10 minutes. We watched as this grand structure came alive, twinkling and dancing before our eyes! The Eiffel Tower became something magical to behold. Ever since its appearance on the Parisian skyline in 1889, the Eiffel Tower has drawn both criticism and praise.  Guy de Maupassant called it a giant and disgraceful skeleton while Paul Gauguin hailed it as a “triumph of iron.”  I second M. Gauguin’s sentiment.

Going In Seine

Another day I took a Bateaux Mouches cruise on the Seine at twilight when the sky was pale mauve turning to shell pink.  The lights were coming up all over the city, and each monument was bathed in its own special glow. No matter how many times you take this romantic meander down the Seine, slipping silently under Paris’ 37 bridges, gazing up at the Notre Dame Cathedral and gawking at the stately, exclusive residences on the Ile St. Louis, it never fails to thrill.

Yes You Can Can

What is a trip to Paris without visiting the neighborhood of Montmartre and experiencing the touristy but oh so fun show at the Moulin Rouge?  This world-famous nightclub opened its doors in 1889. The show that I saw was not dissimilar from what you might see in Las Vegas with one delightful exception: this is, after all, the place where the French Cancan was born over a hundred years ago, and today the Cancan still ends each show.  I can report that their end, if you will, is quite saucy and tres French.  The 60 Doriss girls give it their all – throughout the performance, they continually send amorous, passionate glances out to the gentleman in the audience, signaling that they sure Can!

To be sure, Paris is synonymous with romance, where the City of Light’s seductive beauty is a backdrop to start a "dangerous liaison" or to rekindle the magic of the past. And speaking of magic, spending my last night before departure at the iconic Four Seasons Hotel Georges V was just about as magical as it gets! This art-deco landmark built in 1928, is nestled in the Golden Triangle of Paris. It’s just off the historic Champs-Elysees and my oversized room with an Eiffel Tower view was the piece de resistance to cap off my visit. What an apt inspiration for those memorable last words in Casablanca. My brilliant visit is with me still, and yes, I will always have Paris.

Paris information: www.francegide.com