Manon throughout history — femme fatale, tragic heroine, or both?

Manon Lescaut has had many iterations over nearly 300 years, and has often been seen as a controversial figure.

Manon: Alina Cojocaru on ballet's tragic heroine | English National BalletEnglish National Ballet

Alina Cojocaru on the character of Manon

We're about to re-visit the many ways Manon has been perceived and portrayed over the last 300 years. But how does Alina see Manon, and bring her to life? 

Joseph Caley and Alina Cojocaru in ManonEnglish National Ballet

The story of Manon in literature, film, opera, ballet & pop.

The character of Manon Lescaut has kept on inspiring artists since her story was first written in 1731. And not just in opera and ballet: but also in film (from silent to post-war) and Japanese pop music!

One of the earliest literary imaginings of a femme fatale, Manon has sparked the imagination of artists and their public across eras and genres – including choreographer Sir Kenneth MacMillan, whose ballet is a treasured part of our repertoire.    

Explore this timeline of works of art, both traditional and in popular culture, inspired by the immortal heroine.

Joseph Caley in ManonEnglish National Ballet

1731

L’Abbé Prévost publishes the novel L’Histoire du chevalier des Grieux et de Manon Lescaut.

It tells the story of a well-meaning young man, Des Grieux, led astray by his love for a young woman, Manon, who he finds irresistible. Many other men also fall for her – some willing to buy her off with a luxurious lifestyle. The original Material Girl, Manon cannot resist their offers. But she has Des Grieux wrapped around her finger, driving both of them to perdition. 

Full of twists, the plot includes gambling, theft and prostitution, and Manon is a character so unscrupulous that the book proved too scandalous for its time: it got banned in 1733 and 1735. 

In 1753 its writer published a new edition, with a foreword warning its readers that this tale is “a terrible example of the force of passions.” Quite. Even today, the book is regularly on the curriculum of French high school students.

Rina Kanehara in ManonEnglish National Ballet

1830

Jean-Louis Aumer mounts the first ballet version of the story, for Paris Opera Ballet, with music by Fromental Halevy.

Further ballets are created in 1846 (by Giovanni Casati, music by Vincenzo Bellini, at Teatro Alla Scalla: it ends happily, with Manon and Des Grieux marrying), and 1852 (Giovanni Colinelli, music by Matthias Trebinger).

Junor Souza, James Streeter and Jeffrey Cirio in ManonEnglish National Ballet

1856

The first opera based on the story is composed by Daniel Auber. The story deviates slightly from Prévost’s novel, and this opera is not performed often. It features a popular aria for coloratura sopranos called C’est l’histoire amoureuse, also known as The Laughing Song.   

1884

Jules Massenet composes an opera based on the story: Manon – his most popular. One of its most notable arias is called Adieu, notre petitetable, in which Manon remembers her happy, carefree days with Des Grieux when they shared meals at “our little table.” 

“Will the future have the charms of those beautiful days already passed,” she asks. (Sadly not, in her case).

Ten years later he would write a one-act sequel, Le portrait de Manon, where Des Grieux is now an old man.

James Streeter, Alina Cojocaru and Jeffrey Cirio in ManonEnglish National Ballet

1893

Giacomo Puccini also writes an opera, this time called Manon Lescaut, which premieres in Turin. It shows how extraordinary Manon’s story is that it would inspire three operas, two of which remain very popular to this day.

“Manon is a heroine I believe in and therefore she cannot fail to win the hearts of the public”, said Puccini at the time. 

“Why shouldn’t there be two* operas about Manon? A woman like Manon can have more than one lover. Massenet feels it as a Frenchman, with powder and minuets. I shall feel it as an Italian, with a desperate passion.” (*Puccini was only aware of Massenet’s opera, not Auber’s.)

Alina Cojocaru and Fabian Reimair in ManonEnglish National Ballet

1908

First silent film version, filmed in Italy.
 
The story is also told in 1914 by HH Winslow, 1926 (director Arthur Robison, Germany), and 1927 (Alan Crosland, USA, under the OTT title When a Man Loves).

1940

Czech poet Vítězslav Nezval writes an adaptation of Manon Lescaut in the form of a drama in verse, which premieres in Prague at the radical D40 theatre.

In Czech literature it is traditionally considered as better than Prévost’s original. The script sold 100,000 copies in ten years.

Jeffrey Cirio in ManonEnglish National Ballet

1949

Famous for suspense films, director Henri-Georges Clouzot adapts the story to post-World War II France, turning up its dark overtones: Manon is a former Nazi collaborator, Des Grieux a Resistance fighter and Manon’s brother a black marketeer.

The unscrupulous choices of Manon and her brother, opposed to Des Grieux’s struggles, become a mirror for France’s own divided society. 

1954

A more traditional melodrama, the French-Italian Les Amours de Manon Lescaut (directed by Mario Costa) comes out five years later, set in the original time period of the book.

Jeffrey Cirio and Katja Khaniukova in ManonEnglish National Ballet

1952

 
Boulevard Solitude, a one-act opera with contemporary classical influences, by Hans Werner Henze, opens in Germany.

 Like the Clouzot film from 1949, it sets the story in post-war France, “in order to reflect the problems of living and loving in a society dominated by greed, money and intolerance” (Gramophone).

Daniel Kraus and Crystal Costa in ManonEnglish National Ballet

1970

The film Manon 70 comes out, directed by Jean Aurel, starring Catherine Deneuve. Living in the swinging 60s, Manon is fashion conscious, free thinking and sexually liberated – the perfect vehicle for the challenge to social conventions surging at the time.

Serge Gainsbourg writes and sings the title song, from the perspective of a man who loves her: “Cruel Manon… no, you will never know, Manon, how much I hate what you are… I must have lost my mind… I love you Manon.”    

Alina Cojocaru and Joseph Caley in ManonEnglish National Ballet

1974

Kenneth MacMillan premieres his new ballet, Manon, with dancers Antoinette Sibley in the title role, Anthony Dowell as Des Grieux and David Wall as Lescaut, Manon’s brother.

When asked to summarise the plot to a journalist, he replied: “you have a sixteen-year-old heroine who is beautiful and absolutely amoral, and a hero who is corrupted by her and becomes a cheat, a liar and a murderer. Not exactly your conventional ballet plot, is it?” 

From that non-conventional ballet story, he created a true classic.

Joseph Caley and Alina Cojocaru in ManonEnglish National Ballet

MacMillan also once said: “I wanted to make ballets in which an audience would become caught up with the fate of the characters I showed them”. With Manon, he certainly succeeded.

None of the music from Jules Massenet’s opera features in Kenneth MacMillan’s ballet version – MacMillan instead selected some of Massenet’s most well-known pieces, including an orchestrated version of his song Ouvre tes yeux bleus.

English National Ballet in ManonEnglish National Ballet

1980

In possibly the most unexpected style for Manon Lescaut to appear thus far, she was the inspiration behind a Japanese pop song!

In her hit Anata iro no Manon, Yoshimi Iwasaki sings…
“Oh will you continue to love me
Until you get exhausted and fall on the sand.
Will you give up everything for me?
I am Manon, Manon Lescaut”

Joseph Caley and Alina Cojocaru in ManonEnglish National Ballet

MacMillan's interpretation remains one of the best loved.

English National Ballet’s production of Kenneth MacMillan’s ballet features compelling characters, larger than life scenes and pas de deux ranging from romantic to heartbreaking.

And every dancer who performs the role brings something new to it. 

Credits: Story

All English National Ballet production photography by Laurent Liotardo.

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
Home
Discover
Play
Nearby
Favorites