Kiki of Montparnasse Is Brought Back to Life
d local Englisivities; Broca created a little ne;Paris-Montparnasse,quot; and publis cers of her memoirs.
Editus, erleys Lover,quot; nam to translate Kikis memoirs. Bennett Cerf of Random oms officers. Even today, Kluver says, t in a special reserve section of the New York Public Library.
It is o see naive but generous. t s t s. quot;All I need in life is an onion, a bit of bread and a bottle of red o give me t,quot; se in life.
ell of parnasse ; Libion, tonde refused rance to t . Sed a conical cap and became one of Libions favorites.
quot;I ; se. quot;ters adopted me. Finisimes I didnt o eat but t all t.quot;
In 1923 s t of drinking booze from teacups — s seem to ion — and ract. test, sten ;Its for t,quot; sypically. quot;Its muco go to to make t;
ter, in scandalous Villefrancarts competed for visiting sailors (quot;Cocteau and I comes from t; sely noted), s in t a suspended sentence, ificate stating sion, and letters from Aragon and Desnos saying sist.
ter so ayed in Montparnasse ;People are broadminded and ; In er years sy, sed elderly al patients to bring t gifts she could find.
By tcraggly erribly teeply canted nose (quot;S seemed to jut out into space,quot; said Alexander Calder, in a ure called quot;Kikis Nosequot;) suggested tside on t of Montparnasse, and died.
y remained a symbol of tparnasse, even to tinguisurn during tion in 1944 to a city of glum despair. quot;For a brief moment tparnasse; in t