“A Royal Throwback: Kirsten Dunst as the Young Queen in Marie Antoinette”

“Teen Queen,” by Kennedy Fras­er, was orig­i­nal­ly pub­lished in the Sep­tem­ber 2006 issue of Vogue.

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Sofia Cop­po­la’s film Marie Antoinette,cov­er­ing the nine­teen years that fab­u­lous and trag­ic woman spent at Ver­sailles, cre­at­ed a sen­sa­tion when it opened ear­li­er this year in France. It was filmed large­ly on loca­tion in the palace, with unswerv­ing sup­port from the direc­tors of the muse­um. For the two lead­ing actors—Kirsten Dun­st as the young queen and Cop­po­la’s cousin Jason Schwartz­man as King Louis XVI—it was a trans­for­ma­tive expe­ri­ence to walk in rustling silk and tap­ping heels through halls filled with ghosts. For Dun­st, exquis­ite­ly but unstuffi­ly cos­tumed by Mile­na Canonero (who deserves an Oscar for this work), it was a very sen­su­al role. “You breathe dif­fer­ent­ly in those dress­es; you move in a spe­cial way,” Dun­st says. To pre­pare her­self, on the night a scaled-down crew was film­ing her in the emo­tion­al­ly charged bal­cony scene, she walked alone through the palace in the dark. “I could look in those mir­rors,” she says. “Be still in myself. Feel my place in that house.”

It is Cop­po­la’s third full-length film, after The Vir­gin Sui­cides and Lost in Trans­la­tion.With a $40 mil­lion bud­get, it is by far her most ambi­tious project. She was aware that her sub­ject is controversial—that peo­ple, espe­cial­ly in France, either see the queen as a saint and mar­tyr or real­ly, real­ly hate her. But Cop­po­la for­got about all that and brought her own Marie Antoinette to life. In her film, his­to­ry is seen from a very fem­i­nine young wom­an’s point of view. In the direc­tor’s mind it forms a tril­o­gy with the pre­vi­ous two films, explor­ing the theme of young women dis­cov­er­ing who they are. The queen’s love of fash­ion par­tic­u­lar­ly inter­est­ed her. “You’re con­sid­ered super­fi­cial and sil­ly if you’re inter­est­ed in fash­ion,” Cop­po­la says. “But I think you can be sub­stan­tial and still be inter­est­ed in friv­o­li­ty. The girl in Lost in Trans­la­tion is just about to fig­ure out a way of find­ing her­self, but she has­n’t yet. In this film she makes the next step. I feel that Marie Antoinette is a very cre­ative per­son.”

In 1770, the four­teen-year-old Arch­duchess Marie Antoinette left her home in Aus­tria and trav­eled to meet her fif­teen-year-old fiancé, the dauphin, heir to the throne of France. She was an attrac­tive lit­tle thing, with blonde hair, blue eyes, a fine pale skin, and the pout­ing Haps­burg-fam­i­ly low­er lip. She was the fif­teenth child of a for­mi­da­ble moth­er, the Empress Maria There­sa, who led her huge empire so effi­cient­ly that she went on read­ing state papers while she was giv­ing birth. At the last minute it had been dis­cov­ered that the future bride (who liked danc­ing and play­ing with chil­dren and dolls) could bare­ly read and write. Her moth­er arranged for a crash edu­ca­tion and a makeover, includ­ing cos­met­ic den­tistry, a less provin­cial hair­do, and a com­plete new wardrobe of French-style clothes. Then the girl rolled through the for­est in a spe­cial gild­ed coach with gold ros­es (sym­bol of the Haps­burgs) and lilies (sym­bol of the Bour­bons) nod­ding in a top­knot on the roof. Behind the huge glass win­dows she was like a jew­el in a padded case. From now on, her moth­er had warned her, all eyes would be upon her, and she should do what she was told. Maria There­sa had anx­ious pre­mo­ni­tions; her girl was live­ly and affec­tion­ate in nature but had the atten­tion span of a flea.

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ENTOURAGE
Louis XVI, played by Jason Schwartz­man (AT REAR), and his wife (Dun­st, in pale blue) hold court at a late-night gam­bling par­ty. The queen’s lover, Axel von Fersen (played by Jamie Dor­nan, FRONT LEFT), watch­es long­ing­ly from afar. Shot in Paris at the Cen­tre His­torique des Archives Nationales, Hôtel de Soubise—where many of the movie’s inte­ri­ors were filmed. The sump­tu­ous cos­tumes were cre­at­ed by Mile­na Canonero and the wigs by Roc­chet­ti. Set design by Jean Hugh­es de Chatil­lon.

The palaces where Marie Antoinette grew up had thou­sands of rooms, and she had expe­ri­enced plen­ty of grand court cer­e­mo­ny, but there were times of inti­mate and almost bour­geois fam­i­ly life with her moth­er and father (the easy­go­ing, plea­sure-lov­ing Fran­cis of Lor­raine) and her sib­lings. How­ev­er, noth­ing could pre­pare an out­sider for liv­ing with the rigid eti­quette of Ver­sailles. In a strict­ly hier­ar­chi­cal sys­tem of absolute monar­chy, all pow­er derived from the king, who was next in line to God. Every­thing at the palace was designed to awe. The facade with its huge bal­conied win­dows was a quar­ter-mile long, and its famous mir­rored gallery was more like a stage or a street for deities than an ordi­nary room. An emas­cu­lat­ed nobil­i­ty had to hang out, cap in hand, in hopes of catch­ing the king’s atten­tion (or that of his offi­cial mis­tress) and beg­ging for favors and pen­sions. Pow­er was reflect­ed in the small­est rit­u­al and ges­ture. The pres­ence at the hum­blest human activ­i­ties of the monarch—dressing, undress­ing for bed, eat­ing a meal, using a can­dle or the cham­ber pot—was an hon­or for the courtiers and a chance for them to be reward­ed for their sub­servience. Young Marie Antoinette found her­self shiv­er­ing in the cold while princess­es of the blood fought over the right to pass her the roy­al under­gar­ments. Like box hedges on the move, the ladies squeezed into her apart­ments in pan­niered skirts to watch cir­cles of quite unnec­es­sary rouge applied to her pink-and-white cheeks.

As her moth­er had fore­seen, the debu­tante first lady of Ver­sailles was watched by a thou­sand eyes for the first signs of a faux pas. Gos­sip, humil­i­at­ing mock­ery, and intrigue were the prin­ci­pal court occu­pa­tions. A lady in court dress in the halls of Ver­sailles was prey to many haz­ards: catch­ing her skirt in some oth­er lady’s heel, or falling foul of dog poo or food scraps. “Remem­ber,” one noble­man told his daugh­ters who were about to be pre­sent­ed at court, “in this place vice has no con­se­quence. But ridicule kills.” No one could fault Marie Antoinette on her grace of move­ment; she sailed down the halls and up the stairs as if she were weight­less. Almost imme­di­ate­ly the teenag­er made a fash­ion state­ment that was a seri­ous vio­la­tion of eti­quette: She tried to jet­ti­son the par­tic­u­lar­ly uncom­fort­able corset, the grand corps, worn by the most impor­tant ladies. Under mater­nal pres­sure she gave in; the look the corset gave (and a style of court dress unchanged in sev­en decades) was an inte­gral part of a cer­e­mo­ni­al curt­sy.

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WHO’S THE FAIREST OF THEM ALL?
The stars stroll in the Hall of Mir­rors. This VOGUE pho­to shoot was the first autho­rized by the Château de Ver­sailles in 25 years.

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AFTER HOURS
For sev­en years, their mar­riage was uncon­sum­mat­ed. Instead, the queen found sat­is­fac­tion in cre­at­ing an exquis­ite appear­ance. Here, in the park at Ver­sailles, the cou­ple returns home after attend­ing a masked ball in Paris with her clique, the Pri­vate Soci­ety

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THE POWER AND THE GLORY
Louis and Marie Antoinette were young, lone­ly, and thrown togeth­er by fate. “I think they ached for each oth­er,” Schwartz­man says. Here, the cou­ple looks out over the palace’s parterre and the Foun­tain of Latona.