Period costume ball brings France’s Sun King back to life in Versailles

Nearly 700 people in period costume paraded through the sumptuous apartments of France’s Louis XIV at his palace in Versailles just outside Paris late Monday for the fifth edition of the “Fetes Galantes.”

 

The annual fancy dress ball aims to re-create the baroque splendour of the Sun King’s dazzling court feasts held to show off the wealth and power of France’s longest-reigning monarch, who was born in 1638, ascended to the throne at the age of four and remained king until his death in 1715.

 

Guests dressed in period costumes sits in the royal opera as they take part in the “Fetes Galantes” fancy dress evening in the Chateau de Versailles on May 27, 2019. (Photo by Ludovic MARIN / AFP)

 

“The Duke and Duchess of La Malmaison…welcome to Versailles!” two masters of ceremony call out at the foot of the grand staircase as guests arrive in lavish costumes, rented for the night at a price of several hundred euros (dollars) or meticulously sewn by hand.

 

The theme of this year’s ball is “Marie-Antoinette and fashion.”

 

Daniel, in his 50s, said he spent more than 500 hours making his cardinal’s outfit from red silk with a scarlet train several metres in length.

 

He and his husband, Bruno, who is dressed as a prince, are regulars of the event and also attend the annual carnival in Venice every year.

 

For tickets costing several hundred euros, depending on category, guests can wander through the private apartments of the chateau, which is a World Heritage site and one of France’s biggest tourist attractions — from the Hercules Salon, where a specialist dance company gives a demonstration of baroque era dance, to the world-famous Hall of Mirrors.

 

Guests play a game as they take part in the “Fetes Galantes” fancy dress evening at the Chateau de Versailles on May 27, 2019. (Photo by Ludovic MARIN / AFP)

 

People dressed in period costumes take part in the “Fetes Galantes” fancy dress evening at the “galerie des glaces” in the Chateau de Versailles on May 27, 2019. (Photo by Ludovic MARIN / AFP)

 

“It’s the only occasion in the year where you can come to Versailles in costume,” says Laurent Brunner, head of the palace’s Royal Opera house, where more than 600 of the costumed guests were photographed for the first time this year.

 

In 2020, the Palace of Versailles will celebrate the 250th anniversary of both the Royal Opera, and the wedding of Marie-Antoinette and the future King Louis XVI.

 

Source: Agence France-Presse

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