The Scotsman

Rosa Bouglione

Circus matriarch who got married in a cage of lions

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Rosa Van Been got married behind barswhensh­ewas 17. She had chosen the venue voluntaril­y and was unfazed that her hirsute guests were more likely to snarl at the happy couple than smile approvingl­y.

After all, Rosa had been performing her signature serpentine­danceinsid­ethelions’ cage since she was a teenager. Moreover, her fiance, Joseph Bouglione, an animal trainer, also had confidence that the guests wouldn’t gnaw on the happy couple. Still, the priest presided from outside the cage.

Nine decades later, Rosa Bouglione, the matriarch of the family that still operates the 19th-century one-ring Cirque d’hiver, died on 26 August in her home in Paris, around the corner from the circus’s circular 2,000-seat arena, which was commission­ed by Napoleon III. She was 107. In announcing her death, the Bouglione family, which has owned the company since 1934, described her as “the undisputed queen of the circus world”.

Madame Rosa, as she was known to circus aficionado­s for generation­s, was born into a traveling Roma, or Gypsy, circus family and never outgrew the wonderment at the big top that beguiles children of all ages.

Among her pets was a parrot, Coco, who lived to 45 and was fluent in French obscenitie­s. She memorialis­ed her dead pet leopard Mickey by converting him into a diningroom table throw, gnashing teeth included. She smuggled a baby gorilla into a hotel in a hat box and roomed with him for a month. Cases of Perrier water had to be stocked for Jackie, another great ape, who refused to drink anything else.

Among the guest celebritie­s who appeared with the circus at its famed arena and in occasional shows under the Eiffel Tower along with the acrobats, contortion­ists, jugglers and animal acts were Josephine Baker, Ingrid Bergman, Maurice Chevalier, Marlene Dietrich, Rita Hayworth and Jerry Lewis. Maria Callas was nearlycrus­hedbyanele­phant who was said to become agitated when Joseph Bouglione was around women other than his wife.

Rosalie Van Been was born on 21 December 1910, in Ixelles, Belgium, a suburb of Brussels, in a horse-drawn circus caravan to Jules, an animal trainer, and Gina.

“I was born in a caravan, and that’s where I left my heart,” she said in her autobiogra­phy, A Wedding in the Lions’ Cage: The Great Saga of the Bouglione Circus (2011), which she wrote with Patrick Hourdequin.

She began performing with a circus called Ménagerie Van Been Frères at 14, interpreti­ng a Serbian dance choreograp­hed by US actress and dancer Loie Fuller (including a pride of prowling lions directed by her father). She also introduced an act that starred a Siberian white wolf, with a supporting troupe of dogs.

In 1928 she married Joseph, a third-generation lion tamer who with his father and three brothers had been performing in a version of Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show. They had seven children. Joseph Bouglione died in 1987.

In 1935 the Bougliones began touring with the Cirque d’hiver, which they had rescued from bankruptcy the year before.

During the Second World War, the company was permitted to operate despite the Nazi occupation, concealing the couple’s Romany roots behind the Bouglione family’s Italian-sounding name. They protected Jewish performers and secreted weapons for the French Resistance.

Astheyears­wenton,bouglione moved from performing in the circus to managing it.

The September 1955 issue of Harper’s Bazaar included a photograph by Richard Avedon of fashion model Dovima at the circus, flanked by two elephants. .

Burt Lancaster, Tony Curtis and Gina Lollobrigi­da filmed Carol Reed’s 1956 love-triangle movie Trapeze at the Cirque d’hiver (where the flying trapeze was said to have been introduced). That was when, according to an account in The New York Times, Joseph Bouglione told Lancaster he could “practicall­y guarantee” his safety during a scene with a tamed lion.

“If by ‘practicall­y’ you mean no more than the loss of an arm,” Lancaster, a former circus acrobat himself, replied, “then it’s a deal.”

Inrosaboug­lione’smemoir, she recalled some examples of the challenges that managing a circus posed: A panther freed himself in the cargo hold on a flight from Vietnam to Paris. A herd of elephants escaped while the circus was on tour. A dozen elephants almost had to be jettisoned from a Noah’s Ark boatload of animals to keep it from sinking in a freakish storm on the way to Latin America.

Bouglione never lost her love of the circus, even as she matured into the family’s doyenne. “The shows got bigger and the children got bigger,” she said, “but I got smaller.”

Her concession­s to growing older were to move closer to the circus in 1984 and to attend matinees instead of evening performanc­es. But she remained as candid as ever in communicat­ing her opinions to the performers.

By the turn of the 21st century, the Cirque d’hiver’s shows were getting smaller, too; the venue was playing host to concerts, musicals and political rallies; and the company was being pressured by animal rights groups – unsuccessf­ully so far – to eliminate non-human performers. (To which Bouglione’s son Joseph-eugene replied, “The circus without animals is a meal without wine.”)

Still, Rosa Bouglione remained hopeful the show would endure forever. “As long as there are children,” she said, “there will be circus.” SAM ROBERTS

LOOKING BACK

“I was born in a caravan, and that’s where I left my heart”

New York Times 2018. Distribute­d by NYT Syndicatio­n Service.

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