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Macron presents emergency plan to save France’s culture sector

French President Emmanuel Macron on Wednesday promised to help the country’s artists who have lost their jobs during the coronavirus crisis.

Macron presents emergency plan to save France’s culture sector
The dancers of the Paris Opera. Photo: AFP

While France is less than a week away from beginning to lift its strict, nationwide lockdown, much of the country’s arts and culture sector must remain closed for the time being.

Macron promised the government would not abandon the industry, and in a meeting with representatives from the French arts sector laid out the steps to support them through the crisis.

These included prolonging financial support for intermittent artists, making authors eligible for the solidarity fund for the self-employed and guaranteeing bank loans for small festivals.


One-year extension of financial help

In Wednesday's video conference, Macron promised he had heard the calls for help, especially regarding what in France is known as intermittents du spectacle – temporary show business workers.

Intermittents is a wide group spanning professionals in the culture sector whose jobs usually depend on seasonal hits such as festivals, like comedians, filmmakers, festival creators, dancers or set designers.

They benefit from a special unemployment insurance scheme where they receive a monthly stipend paid by the state providing they work 507 hours over a 12-month period.

As most of the country's cinemas, concert halls, theatres and festivals will have to remain closed in the coming months, many intermittents will not be able to fill up this required slot – meaning they lose the right to the title and the support that comes with.

The president said state help for these groups was to be extended by 12-months.

“I want us to engage to extend (the status) of intermittents until the end of August 2021,” he said.

 

Authors

Macron also said authors will be eligible for financial help from the national solidarity fund.

This fund provides up to €1,500 in monthly support for self-employed and small business owners for March, April and May respectively.

READ MORE: All you need to know about financial help in France for self-employed and business owners

 

State backed loans

“The state will be there with funding, together with the public investment bank,” Macron said.

“The goal is that small festivals can benefit from (these state backed loans), to avoid them being bought by big actors and structures,” he said.

France has rolled out billions in guarantees for banks to incentivise them to grant loans to struggling businesses.

The president said he wanted to set up a special compensation fund for festivals and cinema film shoots that needed to be canceled. 

“We will put everything in place (..) to ensure that the independent (workforce) can remain independent,” Macron said.

 

 

Art in schools 
 
“We should use this period to revolutionise the access to culture and arts,” the president said, opening up for the possibility of merging the problem of artists lacking work with schools lacking staff.
 
“We need you in schools. (..) There will be small groups of 10 children,” he said.
 
“We need the breathing space and have you help our children.”

Reopening

As for the question of when things could reopen, the president said he could not answer.

“I don't know where the epidemic will be next season,” he said.

“We need to live with the virus,” Macron said, adding that some of the country's smaller libraries, art galleries and theatres would be able to reopen in the period following May 11th – but not all.

“We need to marry common sense and innovation (to find the answers) – which is what you know to do,” he said, addressing the artists.

The dancers of the Paris opera went on strike in December, now they're facing huge revenue losses due to the coronavirus emergency. Photo: AFP

'A state of emergency'

The French government has been under growing pressure to act to help the struggling industry, after Le Monde published a open letter titled “Mister President, you have forgotten art and culture, make amends!” on April 30th, signed by a range of celebrities in like Catherine Deneuve, Omar Sy and Jeanne Balibar.

Famous French actress Isabelle Adjani wrote a letter to the president, read out loud on France Inter on May 5th, in which she asked him to declare a state of emergency to save the country's culture sector.

 

The world-famous Paris Opera is looking at losses of €40 million this year, its director warned Tuesday, and may not reopen until 2021.

The company was already hit by a catastrophic strike over pensions reform earlier this year before the coronavirus brought the curtain down again in March.

Director Stephane Lissner told French public radio that if social distancing rules in France were not lifted before September, it might make more sense for its two opera houses to stay closed for building work which had been planned for later in 2021.

France's social distancing guidelines for theatres insist on audience members being masked and seated two metres apart.

“It is just not workable,” Lissner said of the recommendations, which require two empty seats around each audience member.

 

Member comments

  1. Considering the financial help this sector of society already benefits from, I would have thought these people, including journalists, should be the last to complain.

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CULTURE

Listings: French films with English subtitles during the Olympics

Lost in Frenchlation – the cinema club that screens French films with English subtitles – is screening a film a day in Paris throughout the Olympic Games.

Listings: French films with English subtitles during the Olympics

A sporting event gets under way in Paris next month. You might have heard about it. But, if you’re getting fed-up of repeated mentions of the 2024 Paris Olympic Games and wondering what you can do instead of watching wall-to-wall sporting events, worry not – the good people of Lost in Frenchlation have you covered.

They have put together a veritable Olympian schedule of French films with English subtitles to give your cultural muscles a bit of a workout – with an emphasis on films about sport and films about Paris.

The cinematic Olympiad includes two screenings of the ever-popular Audrey Tatou movie Amélie (or Le Fabuleux Destin d’Amélie Poulain, to use its full titl)e; Le Grand Bain, a film described as Full Monty in Speedos; Jean-Luc Godard’s classic À bout de Souffle; this year’s Oscar-winning Anatomie d’une Chute; and, from the never-less-than-fun Asterix series, the perfectly appropriate Asterix aux JO.

The full Olympics’ programme is here:

La Petite Vadrouille 

July 22nd and August 3rd @ Cinéma du Panthéon, 13 rue Victor Cousin, Paris

Tickets – Ranging from €5 to €9.50. You can purchase them HERE

This French comedy by Bruno Podalydès tells the story of a group of friends who attempt to solve their money problems by organising a fake romantic cruise for their wealthy friend, Franck, who wants to seduce a woman.

Le Genou de Claire

July 23rd @ L’Epée de Bois, 100 Rue Mouffetard, Paris

Tickets – Can be purchased on site. They will range from €5 to €9.90.

Directed by Eric Rohmer, the film follows the story of Jérôme, a diplomat and writer living in Sweden, as he prepares to get married. Before the wedding, he decides to take a trip alone to Annecy in France, where he runs into Aurora, a Romanian novelist he had met while working at the French embassy in Bucharest. 

Anatomie d’une Chute

July 24th @ L’Ecran St Denis, 14 Pass. de l’Aqueduc, Saint-Denis

Tickets – Ranging from €4 to €7.50. Can be purchased here

August 8th @ Luminor Hôtel de Ville 20, rue du temple, Paris

Tickets – Ranging from €7 to €11. Purchased here.

The film follows Sandra, a German writer, her French husband Samuel, and their eleven-year-old son Daniel who live a secluded life in the French Alps.

When Samuel dies unexpectedly, Sandra is suspected of having played a role in his death. She tries to prove her innocence, but throughout the trial, the intimate details of the couple’s life together are uncovered.

Les Crevettes Pailletées

July 25th @ Luminor Hôtel de Ville 20, rue du temple, Paris

Tickets – Can be purchased here. Ranging from €7 to €11.

An LGBT comedy, the film follows a homophobic coach who is forced to coach a gay water polo team. Together, they travel to Croatia for the ‘Gay Games,’ the largest LGBT sporting event in the world. 

L’Esprit Coubertin

July 27th @ Cinéma du Panthéon, 13 rue Victor Cousin, Paris

Tickets – Can be purchased here. Ranging from €5 to €9.50.

August 4th @ Luminor Hôtel de Ville 20 rue du temple, Paris

Tickets – You can purchase them here. Tickets range from €7 to €11.

A comedy by director Jérémie Sein, the film tells the story of the French Olympic delegation 10 days into the competition. Without any gold medals, the delegation places all of their hope on Paul, an exceptional, yet immature sports shooter. As the big day approaches, Paul finds himself forced to share a room with Jacob, a swimmer who is more focused on the extra-curricular temptations at the athletes’ village than his own race.

La Revanche des Crevettes Pailletées

July 28th @ Luminor Hôtel de Ville, 20 rue du temple, Paris

Tickets – You can purchase them here. Ranging from €7 to €11.

Another LGBT comedy directed by Cédric Le Gallo and Maxime Govare. It will be the sequel to the 2019 film Les crevettes pailletées (The Shiny Shrimps). 

This next instalment will follow the team as they try to make their way to a competition in Tokyo, only to be derailed by a missing their connecting flight, forcing the team to pass through a very homophobic region in Russia.

Amélie (Le Fabuleux Destin d’Amélie Poulain)

July 29th @ Cinéma du Panthéon, 13 rue Victor Cousin, Paris

Tickets – Can be purchased here. Ranging from €5 to €9.50.

August 7th @ L’Ecran Saint-Denis, 14 Pass. de l’Aqueduc, Saint-Denis

Tickets – Can be purchased here. Ranging from €4 to €7.50.

The whimsical romantic comedy follows a shy Parisian waitress who spends most of her time imagining about the people around her. One day, she decides to step in and attempt to discretely help others find happiness.

Pauline à la plage

July 30th, 8pm @ L’Epée de Bois, 100 Rue Mouffetard, Paris

Tickets – Can be purchased on site. Ranging from  €5 to €9.90.

The film follows the recent divorcée Marion, and her younger cousin Pauline as they go on vacation to their family home in Normandy. During the trip, they run into Marion’s ex-lover Pierre, who introduces them to Henri. As their love lives become entangled, the situation becomes more complicated.

Le Comte de Monte Cristo

July 31st @ L’Ecran Saint-Denis, 14 Pass. de l’Aqueduc, Saint-Denis, France

Tickets – Purchase them here. Ranging from €4 to €7.50. 

Based on the classic novel by Alexandre Dumas, the film follows the story of Edmond Dantès, a French 19-year-old first mate of the merchant ship Pharaon, who is falsely accused of treason and imprisoned at an island fortress off the coast of Marseille. After 14 years he manages to escape, taking on the identity of the ‘Count of Monte Cristo’ and attempting to take revenge on those who betrayed him.

Le Grand Bain

August 1st @ Luminor Hôtel de Ville, 20 rue du temple, Paris

Tickets – Purchase tickets here. Ranging from €7 to €11.

August 10th @ Cinéma du Panthéon, 13 rue Victor Cousin, Paris, France

Tickets – Purchase tickets here. Ranging from €5 to €9.50.

Directed by Gilles Lellouche, the film tells the stories of several swimmers who train at their local municipal swimming pool. One day, they decide to take on the challenge of synchronized swimming, which helps them find meaning in their lives.

Cléo de 5 à 7

August 2nd @ L’Entrepôt, 7 rue Francis de Pressensé, Paris

Tickets – Purchase them here. Ranging from €5 to €8.50.

Directed by the legendary Agnès Varda, the film follows Cléo for a snippet of her life – just 90 minutes – as she waits for the results of a biopsy in Paris. 

Marinette

August 5th @ Cinéma du Panthéon, 13 rue Victor Cousin, Paris

Tickets – Purchase them here. Ranging from €5 to €9.50. 

The film tells the story of a female football player, Marinette Pichon, as she overcomes difficulties in her private life to become a champion and example for girls everywhere.

Conte d’été

August 6th @ L’Epée de Bois, 100 Rue Mouffetard, Paris

Tickets – Can be purchased on site, ranging from €5 to €9.90.

Directed by Eric Rohmer, the film follows Gaspard during the summer holidays, as he tries to decide between three girls he is interested in: Léna, Margot and Solène. 

À bout de Souffle (Breathless)

August 9th @ L’Entrepôt, 7 rue Francis de Pressensé, Paris

Tickets – From €5 to €8.50. Purchased here.

The classic film directed by Jean-Luc Godard, it tells the story of a cocky young boy, Michel Poiccard, who steals a car in Marseille and tries to make his way to Paris. Along the road, he is stopped by a policeman and ends up killing him. Once he gets to Paris he meets an American student named Patricia, who he falls in love with, but Patricia eventually learns about Michel’s dealings.

Asterix aux JO

August 11th @ Luminor Hôtel de Ville, 20 rue du temple, Paris

Tickets – Ranging from €7 to €11. Purchase them here.

Follow France’s favourite heroes, Asterix and Obelix, as they travel to Greece to compete in the Olympic Games. They also face off against Machiavellian Brutus, the son of Caesar.

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