ext_24829 ([identity profile] nirejseki.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] revolution_fr2008-06-26 05:33 pm

Reenactment Help!

I'm doing a reenactment of some scenes from the French Revolution with my friends in a few weeks, and I was wondering - does anyone have an English translation of Camille Desmoulins' Aux Armes speech on July 12? The "jump on a table, pull out a pistol or two, and get everyone to wear green" speech; I'm sure you know what I'm talking about. ^^

Also, I'm looking for Saint-Just's "Report on the Dantonists" (again, in English - alas, I speak no French).

Anything else you can get me in English, I'd be grateful. Preferably by Robespierre, Desmoulins, Danton, Saint-Just, Marat, etc. All is welcome; presume we know nothing. ^_^

We have a pretty willing group, so if there's anything you'd like to see people in costume performing in front of a camera in Central Park or wherever it ends up being - please, either give me a link or email me at riderriddle@yahoo.com

(Also, if anyone knows a lot about costumes of specific people and can link me to something that has really good images, that would be very helpful! It's the little details, like "What did stockings look like" and "What type of shoes?" and "What do the sleeves look like again?" that really get you...and if you can answer any of those questions, that helps. ^^)

Thanks a lot!

[identity profile] victoriavandal.livejournal.com 2008-06-27 05:36 pm (UTC)(link)
My scanner is being totally evil so I haven't managed to scan pics in yet, but the stockings were often pattern-knit or striped: hooray for Emo- it means you can now get vertical and horizontal striped knee-length socks all over the place. (historically, if silk, the silk would have been the knitted silk (I don't know the technical term, but not sheer like 20thc nylons): men would also wear full length tights under culottes (bear in mind elastic wasn't round yet, so stockings were then held up with suspenders at the knee, so I suppose in winter tights were more comfy and warmer). A modern woman's winter tights with a herringbone or more elaborate pattern may do. And culottes/pedal pushers or whatever they're called at the mo: you could stitch three buttons or a buckle to the outside of the knee for a more 18thc look, though some I bought recently from a high-stree shop were like that already (it's the Pirates of the Carribean influence, I suppose).

It was more fashionable to wear long trousers with boots, though. Robespierre's dress was curiously old-fashioned, given his politics: one bitch said he looked like 'an ancien regime tailor', another - a friend - that he wore 'clothes from another age'. Desmoulins and Saint-Just were more up to the minute. I suppose if he's in a bath, your Marat will be wearing nothing but a head towel and a smile (if you drape a white sheet over the cardboard box bathtub it'll look fine (medicinal baths were sometimes lined with a sheet)!

On coats/jackets, an army surplus military greatcoat, the sort that's double breasted so you can fold back the collar into two triangles, if you see what I mean, would look ok - but it'd be heavy, specially for summer. Last winter, in the UK at least, there were a lot of coats with a 1790-1820 look: outsize buttons, double breasted with the top buttons undone and the flaps folded back, and the style was also revived in the late 60's/early 70's (I've got a couple of coats that are pretty well 1790's replicas from the 1970's - very tight fitting, specially the arms.)

If you have it, take a look at A Series of Unfortunate Events: Count Olaf's whole outfit, in the first part of the film, looks suspiciously like Robespierre's striped number!