Succès de scandale (
French for "success from scandal") is a term for any artistic work whose success is attributed, in whole or in part, to public
controversy surrounding the work. In some cases the controversy causes audiences to seek out the work for its titillating content, while in others it simply heightens public curiosity. This concept is echoed by the phrase "there is no such thing as bad publicity".[1]
Belle Époque
The Belle Époque ('beautiful era') in Paris, roughly from 1871 to 1914, was notable for many succès de scandale. This was also where and when the term originated. In the examples below, artists started their careers with some sort of scandal, with some connection to turn-of-the-century Paris. In other cities, provoking a scandal appeared more risky, as
Oscar Wilde found out shortly after his relatively "successful" Parisian scandal (Salomé in 1894, portraying the main character as a
necrophile).
Alfred Jarry shocked Paris in 1896 with the first of his absurdistic Ubu plays: Ubu Roi. The performance of this play was forbidden after the first night, though Jarry got around the prohibition by moving the production to a puppet theatre.[citation needed]
A new group of artists, labeled disrespectfully "
Les Fauves" ("The Wild Beasts") by an art critic, had their successful debut in 1905 Paris (and kept the name).
Richard Strauss had little success with his first two operas, which today are no longer performed. He then tried something different: he set music to Oscar Wilde's Salome in 1905. It created a scandal, including in the New York
Met, where the production had to be closed after one night. But Strauss wanted more, and his next opera (Elektra, 1909) was so "noisy" that cartoons appeared with Strauss directing an orchestra of animals. However, the opera's
libretto, written by
Hugo von Hofmannsthal, was quite tame.
The 1912 ballet Afternoon of a Faun, choreographed and headed by
Vaslav Nijinsky, provoked strong reactions. The newspaper Le Figaro wrote in a front-page review that the "movements are filthy and bestial in their eroticism".[3] Despite, or because of, this criticism, the ballet was sold-out in Paris.
Paul Chabas had won a most prestigious prize with his September Morn in Paris in 1912. Nudity as portrayed in this painting was, however, far from shocking to Parisians half a century after Déjeuner. The market value of the painting remained low. Then, Chabas put it on display in a
New York shop window in 1913. There, for the first time in history, it appears a succès de scandale scheme was set up by a publicity agent (
Harry Reichenbach), who "accidentally" tipped off a morality crusader to the picture. The scandal that evolved brought financial success and secured Chabas's place in art history books. Although later deemed
kitsch, the painting ended up in one of the most prestigious museums of New York.
Other examples
This[clarification needed] was not the last time that
Comstockery fanned the success it wanted to prohibit: "I expect it will be the making of me" said
Mae West to the press in 1927,[citation needed] under arrest after the
Society for the Suppression of Vice had maneuvered to get her play titled Sex re-censored by the
Police Department Play Jury. A few years later, when she was over 40 years old, her sex-symbol status paid off when her 1935 film contract made her the highest-paid woman to date.[citation needed]
^Le Figaro, 30 May 1912, "Un Faux Pas" Gaston Calmette editorial, cited in Buckle, Nijinsky, p.242. Buckle suggests Calmette was seeking to imply Nijinsky was showing bulging genitalia when seen in profile.