fbpx
Wikipedia

Le Train Bleu

The Calais-Mediterranée Express was a French luxury night express train which operated from 1886 to 2003. It gained international fame as the preferred train of wealthy and famous passengers between Calais and the French Riviera during the interwar period. It was colloquially referred to as Le Train Bleu in French (which became its formal name after World War II) and the Blue Train in English because of its dark-blue sleeping cars.

History edit

Calais Nice Rome Express edit

In December 1883 the Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits (CIWL) created its second luxury train after the Orient Express was introduced in June of that year. Due to contracts between CIWL's competitor, the Pullman Company, and the owner of the Mont Cenis Pass Railway, the Società per le strade ferrate dell'Alta Italia, CIWL could not use the Fréjus Rail Tunnel, so CIWL was forced to use the longer route along the Mediterranean coast. The connection between Paris and Rome was introduced as Calais Nice Rome Express,[1] but it was reduced to Calais Nice Express after only one year.[2] In 1885 several Italian railways merged and CIWL could buy the routes formerly served by Pullman, which made it possible to use the shorter Mont Cenis Railway. The train was to be named Rome Express. In order to serve British customers, the Calais-Mediterranée Express was created in 1886, but it lasted until 1890 before the Rome Express made its first journey.

Calais-Méditerranée edit

The Calais-Méditerrannée Express was introduced in the 1886/1887 winter timetable. In the winter of 1889/1890 the name was changed to Méditerrannée Express, due to the creation of the Club train.[3] At the southern end, the route was extended to San Remo, but the portion north of Paris was taken over by the Club Train. After the introduction of the Rome Express on 15 November 1890, the two trains were combined between Paris and Mâcon.[4] South of Mâcon, the Rome Express continued during the night over the Mont Cenis railway and the Méditerrannée Express ran through the Rhone valley to the Côte d'Azur.

 
Route in France
Route and Timetable 1892[5]
Southbound Country Station km Northbound
Club Train
14:55   United Kingdom Holborn Viaduct 22:47
15:00   United Kingdom London Charing Cross 22:43
15:00   United Kingdom London Victoria 22:43
22:47   France Paris Nord 15:15
Méditerrannée Express
23:40   France Paris Nord 14:20
08:49   France Lyon 06:06
14:25   France Marseille 00:30
18:18   France Cannes 20:43
19:00   France Nice 20:00
19:37   Monaco Monte Carlo 18:52
20:14   France Menton 18:36
20:36   Italy Ventimiglia 18:14

After several breaches of contract by CIWL,[4] the London Chatham & Dover Railway cancelled the contract, and it lasted until 1926 before a new integrated boattrain service was created as Golden Arrow. The Méditerrannée Express' northern terminus was Calais again. The service was suspended at the beginning of the First World War.

Train Bleu edit

The train bleu ("blue train") service resumed on 16 November 1920 between Paris and Menton with pre-war carriages, operated by the Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits using the Chemins de fer de Paris à Lyon et à la Méditerranée (PLM). The whole route was served again on 9 December 1922. The new Calais-Méditerranée Express was composed of exclusively first-class, new steel carriages (S-cars) built by Leeds Forge Company in England and the CIWL-works in Munich, along with a dining car renowned for its haute cuisine five-course dinners. The "introduction ride" was made by two trains with many invitees and nearly 50 journalists, departing from Calais and Paris bound for Nice. The sleeping cars were painted blue with gold trim. This eventually led to the nickname Blue Train in 1923. This name was taken over soon in English advertisements: "Summer on the French Riviera by the Blue Train".[6]

The height of the season for le train bleu was between November and April, when many travellers escaped the British winter to spend time on the French Riviera. Its terminus was at the Gare Maritime in Calais, where it picked up British passengers from the ferries across the English Channel. It departed at 1:00 in the afternoon and stopped at the Gare du Nord in Paris, then travelled around Paris by the Chemin de fer de Petite Ceinture to the Gare de Lyon, where it picked up additional passengers and coaches. It departed Paris early in the evening, and made stops at Dijon, Châlons, and Lyon, before reaching Marseilles early the next morning. It then made further stops at all the major resort towns of the French Riviera, or Côte d'Azur: Saint-Raphaël, Juan-les-Pins, Antibes, Cannes, Nice, Monte-Carlo, before reaching its final destination, Menton, near the Italian border. The sleeping cars had only ten sleeping compartments each, with one attendant assigned to each sleeping car. Early passengers included the Prince of Wales (later King Edward VIII), Charlie Chaplin, designer Coco Chanel, Winston Churchill and writers F. Scott Fitzgerald, Evelyn Waugh and Somerset Maugham.

The Great Depression and the devaluation of the Pound Sterling greatly reduced the number of wealthy British and American travellers going to the Riviera, reducing the two trains to two carriages conveyed with the Golden Arrow between Calais and Paris.[7] After a one and half hour stop the two luxury cars were conveyed further south by the Côte d'Azur Pullman Express. In 1936, the new Popular Front Government in France introduced the paid two-week vacation for French workers. Second-class and third-class sleeping cars were added to the Blue Train to carry middle and working class French people on holiday to the South of France. In 1938, the Popular Front government nationalized the private railway companies in France, including PLM. After 1938, le train bleu was run by the new French national railway company SNCF as an ordinary night express train.

1949–1978 edit

Service was interrupted during the Second World War but resumed in 1949, when the train officially took the name Le Train Bleu. Scheduled airline service began between Paris and Nice in 1945, which took away much of the wealthy clientele. In 1962 the rolling stock was replaced by MU coaches and second class coaches were introduced in the Blue Train.[8] In 1971 the CIWL sold its rolling stock to the national railway companies that operated the trains further on. After 1978, the train added cars with couchettes to attract more middle-class passengers.

The end edit

Beginning in the 1980s the night express trains were gradually replaced by the high-speed TGV trains, which cut the length of the journey from Paris to Nice from 20 hours to five, and this effectively ended the era of luxury night trains to the French Riviera. After a long history, Le Train Bleu ceased to exist under that name in September 2003, when SNCF rebranded all of its principal overnight trains as Service Nuit.[9]

The train coaches remained in use until 9 December 2007,[citation needed] by which time the train had lost its dining car and most of its sleeping cars. An overnight train between Paris and Nice continued to run under SNCF's Intercités de Nuit brand, only carrying couchette and reclining seat accommodation and not luxury sleeping cars, but this was discontinued from 9 December 2017 due to withdrawal of funding from the French Government.[10]

However, a Paris-Nice night train has been scheduled to restart on 29 March 2021. As of July, 2023, there is a night train to and from Paris Austerlitz to Nice which follows much of the route of Le Train Bleu.

In art, literature and popular culture edit

In 1924, le train bleu inspired a ballet of the same name, created by Serge Diaghilev and the Ballets Russes, with music by Darius Milhaud, a story by Jean Cocteau, choreography by Bronislava Nijinska, stage design by Henri Laurens, costumes by Coco Chanel and a curtain painted by a 1922 work of Pablo Picasso.

The train was featured in the novel The Mystery of the Blue Train (1928) by Agatha Christie, and the Hercule Poirot mystery Three Act Tragedy also by Agatha Christie, the novel The Colossus of Arcadia (1938) by E. Phillips Oppenheim and the novel Mon Ami Maigret (1949) by Georges Simenon.

The Blue Train Races were a series of record-breaking attempts between automobiles and trains in the late 1920s and early 1930s. It saw a number of motorists and their own, or sponsored, automobiles race against "le train bleu". The Blue Train Bentleys, two Bentley Speed Six automobiles owned by "Bentley Boy" Woolf Barnato, were involved in the Blue Train Races.

Philip Marlowe comes around after being knocked unconscious to see a poster advertising "See the French Riviera by The Blue Train" in Raymond Chandler's novel "The Lady in the Lake" (1943).

In 1963, the belle-epoque restaurant at the Gare de Lyon train station in Paris was renamed Le Train Bleu to honor the historic train.

A French television series, Le train bleu s'arrete 13 fois (lit. "The Blue Train Stops 13 times"), appeared on the French channel ORTF between October 8, 1965, and March 11, 1966. It featured one mystery episode for each of the thirteen stops of the Train Bleu between Paris and Menton, based on short stories by Pierre Boileau and Thomas Narcejac.

Bloomingdale's flagship store in New York City operated a restaurant named Le Train Bleu from 1979 to 2016. Named after the legendary train, its interior was a wider version of what the dining car on the original train might have looked like.[11]

The Blue Train is mentioned in the 2022 movie "Downton Abbey: A New Era" (set in 1928) carrying the Grantham family through France to the French Riviera and back.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Mühl, A. (1998). 125 Jahre/Ans/Years CIWL. Freiburg. p. 40.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  2. ^ Mühl, A. (1998). 125 Jahre/Ans/Years CIWL. Freiburg. p. 264.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. ^ Mühl, A. (1998). 125 Jahre/Ans/Years CIWL. Freiburg. p. 58.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ a b Behrend, G. (1977). Histoire des Trains de luxe. Fribourg: Office du Livre. p. 42.
  5. ^ Mühl, A. (1998). 125 Jahre/Ans/Years CIWL. Freiburg. p. 43.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  6. ^ Behrend, G. (1977). Histoire des Trains de luxe. Fribourg: Office du Livre. pp. 88–90.
  7. ^ Behrend, G. (1977). Histoire des Trains de luxe. Fribourg: Office du Livre. p. 91.
  8. ^ Behrend, G. (1977). Histoire des Trains de luxe. Fribourg: Office du Livre. p. 96.
  9. ^ "What's new this month". Thomas Cook European Timetable. Peterborough, UK: Thomas Cook Publishing. September 2003. p. 3.
  10. ^ Smith, Mark. "Guide to French overnight couchette trains". The Man in Seat 61. Retrieved 30 May 2020.
  11. ^ "Ode to the Lost Blue Train, an Iconic NYC Rooftop Restaurant". 28 February 2018.

Books edit

  • Lamming, Clive (2007). Larousse des trains et des chemins de fer. Paris.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Ring, Jim (2006). Riviera -The Rise and Rise of the Côte d'Azur. London: John Murray Publishers.

train, bleu, this, article, about, french, luxury, passenger, train, ballet, ballet, restaurant, restaurant, other, trains, known, english, blue, train, blue, train, disambiguation, calais, mediterranée, express, french, luxury, night, express, train, which, o. This article is about the French luxury passenger train For the ballet see Le Train Bleu ballet For the restaurant see Le Train Bleu restaurant For other trains known in English as the Blue Train see Blue Train disambiguation The Calais Mediterranee Express was a French luxury night express train which operated from 1886 to 2003 It gained international fame as the preferred train of wealthy and famous passengers between Calais and the French Riviera during the interwar period It was colloquially referred to as Le Train Bleu in French which became its formal name after World War II and the Blue Train in English because of its dark blue sleeping cars Contents 1 History 1 1 Calais Nice Rome Express 1 2 Calais Mediterranee 1 3 Train Bleu 1 4 1949 1978 1 5 The end 2 In art literature and popular culture 3 See also 4 References 4 1 BooksHistory editCalais Nice Rome Express edit In December 1883 the Compagnie Internationale des Wagons Lits CIWL created its second luxury train after the Orient Express was introduced in June of that year Due to contracts between CIWL s competitor the Pullman Company and the owner of the Mont Cenis Pass Railway the Societa per le strade ferrate dell Alta Italia CIWL could not use the Frejus Rail Tunnel so CIWL was forced to use the longer route along the Mediterranean coast The connection between Paris and Rome was introduced as Calais Nice Rome Express 1 but it was reduced to Calais Nice Express after only one year 2 In 1885 several Italian railways merged and CIWL could buy the routes formerly served by Pullman which made it possible to use the shorter Mont Cenis Railway The train was to be named Rome Express In order to serve British customers the Calais Mediterranee Express was created in 1886 but it lasted until 1890 before the Rome Express made its first journey Calais Mediterranee edit The Calais Mediterrannee Express was introduced in the 1886 1887 winter timetable In the winter of 1889 1890 the name was changed to Mediterrannee Express due to the creation of the Club train 3 At the southern end the route was extended to San Remo but the portion north of Paris was taken over by the Club Train After the introduction of the Rome Express on 15 November 1890 the two trains were combined between Paris and Macon 4 South of Macon the Rome Express continued during the night over the Mont Cenis railway and the Mediterrannee Express ran through the Rhone valley to the Cote d Azur nbsp Route in France Route and Timetable 1892 5 Southbound Country Station km Northbound Club Train 14 55 nbsp United Kingdom Holborn Viaduct 22 47 15 00 nbsp United Kingdom London Charing Cross 22 43 15 00 nbsp United Kingdom London Victoria 22 43 22 47 nbsp France Paris Nord 15 15 Mediterrannee Express 23 40 nbsp France Paris Nord 14 20 08 49 nbsp France Lyon 06 06 14 25 nbsp France Marseille 00 30 18 18 nbsp France Cannes 20 43 19 00 nbsp France Nice 20 00 19 37 nbsp Monaco Monte Carlo 18 52 20 14 nbsp France Menton 18 36 20 36 nbsp Italy Ventimiglia 18 14 After several breaches of contract by CIWL 4 the London Chatham amp Dover Railway cancelled the contract and it lasted until 1926 before a new integrated boattrain service was created as Golden Arrow The Mediterrannee Express northern terminus was Calais again The service was suspended at the beginning of the First World War Train Bleu edit The train bleu blue train service resumed on 16 November 1920 between Paris and Menton with pre war carriages operated by the Compagnie Internationale des Wagons Lits using the Chemins de fer de Paris a Lyon et a la Mediterranee PLM The whole route was served again on 9 December 1922 The new Calais Mediterranee Express was composed of exclusively first class new steel carriages S cars built by Leeds Forge Company in England and the CIWL works in Munich along with a dining car renowned for its haute cuisine five course dinners The introduction ride was made by two trains with many invitees and nearly 50 journalists departing from Calais and Paris bound for Nice The sleeping cars were painted blue with gold trim This eventually led to the nickname Blue Train in 1923 This name was taken over soon in English advertisements Summer on the French Riviera by the Blue Train 6 The height of the season for le train bleu was between November and April when many travellers escaped the British winter to spend time on the French Riviera Its terminus was at the Gare Maritime in Calais where it picked up British passengers from the ferries across the English Channel It departed at 1 00 in the afternoon and stopped at the Gare du Nord in Paris then travelled around Paris by the Chemin de fer de Petite Ceinture to the Gare de Lyon where it picked up additional passengers and coaches It departed Paris early in the evening and made stops at Dijon Chalons and Lyon before reaching Marseilles early the next morning It then made further stops at all the major resort towns of the French Riviera or Cote d Azur Saint Raphael Juan les Pins Antibes Cannes Nice Monte Carlo before reaching its final destination Menton near the Italian border The sleeping cars had only ten sleeping compartments each with one attendant assigned to each sleeping car Early passengers included the Prince of Wales later King Edward VIII Charlie Chaplin designer Coco Chanel Winston Churchill and writers F Scott Fitzgerald Evelyn Waugh and Somerset Maugham The Great Depression and the devaluation of the Pound Sterling greatly reduced the number of wealthy British and American travellers going to the Riviera reducing the two trains to two carriages conveyed with the Golden Arrow between Calais and Paris 7 After a one and half hour stop the two luxury cars were conveyed further south by the Cote d Azur Pullman Express In 1936 the new Popular Front Government in France introduced the paid two week vacation for French workers Second class and third class sleeping cars were added to the Blue Train to carry middle and working class French people on holiday to the South of France In 1938 the Popular Front government nationalized the private railway companies in France including PLM After 1938 le train bleu was run by the new French national railway company SNCF as an ordinary night express train 1949 1978 edit Service was interrupted during the Second World War but resumed in 1949 when the train officially took the name Le Train Bleu Scheduled airline service began between Paris and Nice in 1945 which took away much of the wealthy clientele In 1962 the rolling stock was replaced by MU coaches and second class coaches were introduced in the Blue Train 8 In 1971 the CIWL sold its rolling stock to the national railway companies that operated the trains further on After 1978 the train added cars with couchettes to attract more middle class passengers The end edit Beginning in the 1980s the night express trains were gradually replaced by the high speed TGV trains which cut the length of the journey from Paris to Nice from 20 hours to five and this effectively ended the era of luxury night trains to the French Riviera After a long history Le Train Bleu ceased to exist under that name in September 2003 when SNCF rebranded all of its principal overnight trains as Service Nuit 9 The train coaches remained in use until 9 December 2007 citation needed by which time the train had lost its dining car and most of its sleeping cars An overnight train between Paris and Nice continued to run under SNCF s Intercites de Nuit brand only carrying couchette and reclining seat accommodation and not luxury sleeping cars but this was discontinued from 9 December 2017 due to withdrawal of funding from the French Government 10 However a Paris Nice night train has been scheduled to restart on 29 March 2021 As of July 2023 there is a night train to and from Paris Austerlitz to Nice which follows much of the route of Le Train Bleu In art literature and popular culture editThis section may contain irrelevant references to popular culture Please remove the content or add citations to reliable and independent sources April 2024 In 1924 le train bleu inspired a ballet of the same name created by Serge Diaghilev and the Ballets Russes with music by Darius Milhaud a story by Jean Cocteau choreography by Bronislava Nijinska stage design by Henri Laurens costumes by Coco Chanel and a curtain painted by a 1922 work of Pablo Picasso The train was featured in the novel The Mystery of the Blue Train 1928 by Agatha Christie and the Hercule Poirot mystery Three Act Tragedy also by Agatha Christie the novel The Colossus of Arcadia 1938 by E Phillips Oppenheim and the novel Mon Ami Maigret 1949 by Georges Simenon The Blue Train Races were a series of record breaking attempts between automobiles and trains in the late 1920s and early 1930s It saw a number of motorists and their own or sponsored automobiles race against le train bleu The Blue Train Bentleys two Bentley Speed Six automobiles owned by Bentley Boy Woolf Barnato were involved in the Blue Train Races Philip Marlowe comes around after being knocked unconscious to see a poster advertising See the French Riviera by The Blue Train in Raymond Chandler s novel The Lady in the Lake 1943 In 1963 the belle epoque restaurant at the Gare de Lyon train station in Paris was renamed Le Train Bleu to honor the historic train A French television series Le train bleu s arrete 13 fois lit The Blue Train Stops 13 times appeared on the French channel ORTF between October 8 1965 and March 11 1966 It featured one mystery episode for each of the thirteen stops of the Train Bleu between Paris and Menton based on short stories by Pierre Boileau and Thomas Narcejac Bloomingdale s flagship store in New York City operated a restaurant named Le Train Bleu from 1979 to 2016 Named after the legendary train its interior was a wider version of what the dining car on the original train might have looked like 11 The Blue Train is mentioned in the 2022 movie Downton Abbey A New Era set in 1928 carrying the Grantham family through France to the French Riviera and back See also editFamous trainsReferences edit Muhl A 1998 125 Jahre Ans Years CIWL Freiburg p 40 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Muhl A 1998 125 Jahre Ans Years CIWL Freiburg p 264 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Muhl A 1998 125 Jahre Ans Years CIWL Freiburg p 58 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Behrend G 1977 Histoire des Trains de luxe Fribourg Office du Livre p 42 Muhl A 1998 125 Jahre Ans Years CIWL Freiburg p 43 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Behrend G 1977 Histoire des Trains de luxe Fribourg Office du Livre pp 88 90 Behrend G 1977 Histoire des Trains de luxe Fribourg Office du Livre p 91 Behrend G 1977 Histoire des Trains de luxe Fribourg Office du Livre p 96 What s new this month Thomas Cook European Timetable Peterborough UK Thomas Cook Publishing September 2003 p 3 Smith Mark Guide to French overnight couchette trains The Man in Seat 61 Retrieved 30 May 2020 Ode to the Lost Blue Train an Iconic NYC Rooftop Restaurant 28 February 2018 Books edit Lamming Clive 2007 Larousse des trains et des chemins de fer Paris a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Ring Jim 2006 Riviera The Rise and Rise of the Cote d Azur London John Murray Publishers Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Le Train Bleu amp oldid 1220636004, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.