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Belle de nuit

By JUSTINE ELIAS  |  June 16, 2008

Belle paints prostitution as one more service job. What’s odd, though, is how few other women she encounters: no waitresses, no chambermaids, no female cabbies, few competing call girls. In her first book, Belle de Jour wrote of yearning for a career — politics? stocks? — where she’d be the only woman, the queen bee, among a crew of eligible attractive men. Now Showtime’s Belle is surrounded by men — barmen, custodians, taxi drivers — but she barely notices them. Hers is the age of lowered expectations. They also serve who only stand and wait.

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Related: Masterpieces and mysteries, Last man standing, No plain Jane, More more >
  Topics: Television , Julie Christie, Billie Piper, Daniel Defoe,  More more >
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ARTICLES BY JUSTINE ELIAS
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   PLAIN TALK  |  September 15, 2009
    Jesse Sheidlower, an editor-at-large of the Oxford English Dictionary , an expert in slang, and the author of The F-Word , can't stop talking about fuck.
  •   HARD TIMES  |  March 24, 2009
    When last year the BBC interrupted its broadcast of Little Dorrit — which hinges on the downfall of a Bernie Madoff–like figure — for a tawdry true-crime documentary, thousands of viewers complained: don't leave us hanging!
  •   BELLE DE NUIT  |  June 16, 2008
    Belle is, as she introduces herself right up front, “a whore.” Or, if you please, “prostitute, call girl, escort, hooker, courtesan.”
  •   OSS 17: LE CAIRE NID D'ESPIONS/OSS 117: CAIRO, NEST OF SPIES  |  May 14, 2008
    Imagine a blithe, covertly bisexual James Bond swanning around pre-Suez Cairo in a send-up directed by the early Zucker brothers.
  •   AMAZING GRACE  |  February 21, 2007
    Michael Apted’s stirring if conventional bio-pic of 18th-century British abolitionist William Wilberforce offers rum, funneled into anti-slavery PM William Pitt the Younger, and sugar, in the form of the hero’s adoring wife, Barbara.

 See all articles by: JUSTINE ELIAS

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