Every Frenchman Has One
Olivia de Havilland
Paperback
(Popular Library, March 15, 1963)
"Every Frenchman Has One" with its delightfully misleading title is a delightful look at French culture during Olivia de Havilland's lifetime. This is the uninhibited, delectable escapades of delicious Olivia, who fell in love with a Frenchman. Does the title refer to the legendary French mistress? A jaunty beret? A striped scarf? A massive...ego? The answer, of course, is a decided, "Non!" Instead, the British-born, American-raised actress refers to the foundation of all good health (according to the French anyway), the liver!(Never mind that every Frenchwoman has one as well, but that would make for a longer, perhaps unwieldy, title.) Written in the late 1950's, after Miss de Havilland moved to Paris and became Mrs. Pierre Galant, the book narrates her various "adventures" as she navigates her way through the thicket of French culture and tradition. There's the obligatory chapter on French fashion, the amusing chapter on her struggles learning how to "translate" Centigrade into Fahrenheit, and the delightful one describing how she fell happily into the French custom of reviving one's health at a spa on an annual basis. Short and written in a breezy manner, the chapters unfold in no particular order, but always adhere to the general theme of France as an interesting specimen to analyze. At times Miss de Havilland appears a bit bewildered, as if she had landed on an alien planet and was surrounded by incomprehensible creatures who are so different from what she'd known that her curiosity is tinged with a little fear. Exaggerated for effect, it remains as delightful as when it was written over 50 years ago. It's a quick read and a funny introduction into many of the things that make France unique. It holds special interest for those fascinated by what Paris was like at a particular point in history, a time when the greater world was enjoying a somewhat temporary peace and Paris still bore traces of its prewar glory.