PA R I S I A N WA L K WAY S ❘ R U E V É R O N
RUE VÉRON Jeffrey T Iverson meets the restaurateurs and retailers drawing people’s attention to an altogether quieter part of Montmartre
APPELLATIONS D’ORIGINE
ATELIER-BROCANTE
JOËL KNAFO ART
26 rue Lepic Tel. +33 (0)1 42 62 94 66
34 rue Véron Tel. +33 (0)1 42 58 95 13
21 & 24 rue Véron Tel. +33 (0)7 81 61 21 57
Founders Isabelle and Eric call their gourmet food shop “a Tour de France of gastronomy,” and it is. From genuine Nougat de Montélimar, to Édouard Artzner’s inimitable Alsace-made foie gras, Jean-Philippe Mandard’s famous Alps honey and authentic Provençal bouillabaisse fish stew from a tiny producer in Sète,Appellations d’Origine celebrates the flavours of France’s every region.
Some antique shops are simply collections of old junk, but Catherine Jacquet’s atelier-brocante, or ‘antiques-workshop’, is an oasis of imagination. Her inventive, thematic window displays, which evolve with every season, set the playful tone for her shop; a lovingly assembled selection of dolls, toys, lamps, paintings, postcards, furniture, fabrics and couture items from 1880 to 1950.
Joël Knafo moved his gallery from the 13th district to rue Véron in 2016, drawn by “the power of Montmartre’s history.” It’s no longer the locus of the art world, yet the artistic avantgarde has returned to Montmartre thanks to Knafo, showing the works of contemporary and street artists like Shepard Fairey, Philippe Hérard, Gottfried Salzmann and Speedy Graphito.
B
ack in 1929, Édith Piaf was still known as Édith Giovanna Gassion. Then 14 years old, the future chanteuse spent her days following her father around France with his touring acrobatic act. But La Môme Piaf, the little sparrow, as she’d one day be known, would soon spread her wings. With her friend Simone Berteaut, she began romping about the streets of Belleville in her spare time, singing songs for money. By around 1930, she’d scraped enough together to leave her father’s act and make her first big move. Piaf settled in Montmartre, renting a room at 18 rue Véron, in a humble lodging house originally built for the workers erecting the Sacré-Cœur basilica: the Grand Hôtel de Clermont. Living on rue Véron, a back street parallel to rue des Abbesses, between rue Lepic and rue Germain-Pilon, Piaf could busk on the nearby sidewalks of Pigalle, and cut her performance teeth at the legendary Montmartre cabaret Le Lapin Agile. By 1935, she’d been discovered by nightclub owner Louis Leplée, had embraced her stage name, and launched a globetrotting singing career. Imagine the extraordinary 54 ❘ FRANCE TODAY Oct/Nov 2017
Édith Piaf, one-time resident of the rue Véron, with the boxer Marcel Cerdan, in 1948 or 1949
twist of fate when, in 1948, Piaf, by then an international star, first went to meet the love of her life, world heavyweight champion Marcel Cerdan, for a drink and found herself stepping into the bar of the Grand Hôtel de Clermont. Cerdan’s boxing club, it turned out, was situated exactly next door to where Piaf had lived as a penniless, aspiring artist nearly two decades before. Remarkably, the Grand Hôtel de Clermont still stands. And though the profile of the hotel guests has evolved from struggling artists to budget-hunting tourists, the bar, with its mosaic floor and 1920s zinc counter, has hardly changed since the era when Piaf and Cerdan came here to sip cocktails and chat in the corner. Renowned among lovers of atmospheric watering holes, it’s now simply known as Chez Ammad, after its proprietor of nearly 40 years. Guardian of neighbourhood lore, Ammad’s walls are covered with historic photos and strange and vibrant murals painted by former hotel residents. In some, Ammad himself is the subject, as in a colourful 1997 tableau painted by French naïf artist Michel Cordi. “This bar has something special,” says Ammad, “So