Or rather, happy day before Bastille Day, since July 14 is the time to celebrate the day in 1789 when an angry mob stormed the prison and released scads of prisoners–well, 7 anyway. It was officially declared a national holiday on July 6, 1880. It’s a good excuse to spend your weekend drinking champagne, eating wonderfully unhygenic cheese, wearing berets, and listening to “La vie en rose” over and over (it’s MY excuse, anyway, though really every day is a good day for champagne and Piaf!)
To help you get your celebration in order, here are a few links to give you some party pointers and a few quotes to inspire you.
Fun party drinks (they mostly appear to be sticky-sweet concoctions made from things like cherry brandy, but I think the Marie Antoinette sounds sort of yummy…)
Fun party menus (though with drinks like the Montmartre, who needs food???)
Official stuff from the French Embassy
“France has more need of me than I have need of France” –Napoleon
“It’s true that the French have a certain obsession with sex, but it’s a particularly adult obsession. France is the thriftiest of all nations; to a Frenchman sex provides the most economical way to have fun. The French are a logical race.” –Anita Loos
“In America, only the successful writer is important; in France all writers are important; in England no writer is important; and in Australia you have to explain what a writer is” —
Geoffrey Cottrell
“I have tried to lift France out of the mud. But she will return to her errors and vomitings. I cannot prevent the French from being French.” –Charles de Gaulle
“Boy, those French. They have a different word for everything.” –Steve Martin
“Paris is always a good idea.” –Audrey Hepburn in Sabrina
“To err is human. To loaf is Parisian.” –Victor Hugo
“Frenchmen are like gunpowder, each by itself smutty and contemptible, but mass them together and they are terrible indeed!” –Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Ack! And I missed it. I must try some of those drinks sometime anyway.
I just read that it wasn’t the poor of Paris who decided to storm the Bastille to free the oppressed masses of prisoners ( 7 as Amanda said), it was the merchant class. People who were fairly well off. They didn’t do it to free the prisoners either; they did it to steal stores of gunpowder. http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/5-myths-about-the-french-revolution/2015/07/09/6f27c6f0-25af-11e5-b72c-2b7d516e1e0e_story.html