Antoinette Clavel (later known professionally as Madame Saint-Huberty) was the daughter of Jean-Pierre Clavel, a musician employed as a
répétiteur in the private opera troupe of
Charles IV Theodore,
Elector Palatine. Her mother was Claude-Antoinette Pariset, the daughter of a grocer from
Sélestat. Her biographers have often disagreed about her place of birth. Renwick, for example, found instances of it being indicated as
Toul,
Thionville, or
Mannheim, and Clayton gives it as
Toulouse – presumably after having interpreted "Toul" as an abbreviation. However, after discovering her baptismal certificate in the
Archives nationales,
de Goncourt established that she was born in Strasbourg, where she was baptized Anne-Antoinette (or Anna-Antonia on the certificate) at the church of
Saint-Pierre-le-Jeune on the day after her birth. There is no mention of the name "Cécile" on her baptismal certificate, and de Goncourt suggests that she adopted this name only in later life. Dorlan traced her birthplace to 131 Grand'rue (modern spelling Grande Rue), Strasbourg (near the junction with rue Sainte-Barbe), and his article is accompanied by a photograph of a house that he maintains was once owned by Pierre Clavel. Antoinette had at least three siblings: a brother named Jean-Pierre, who became a
gilder and a seller of prints from a shop beneath the house in the Grand'rue; Pierre-Étienne, who became a pork butcher; and a sister who appears to have been living in or near Paris during the early 1790s. Antoinette began the study of singing and the
harpsichord under her father's direction at a very young age, and quickly displayed an extraordinary musical talent. Whilst her voice was still maturing, she met the
composer Jean-Baptiste Lemoyne in
Warsaw in 1770, and he supervised her musical education for the next four years. She became a protégée of a Princess Lubomirska (whom it is difficult to identify with absolute precision, since there was more than one princess of that name in Warsaw at that time), and eventually obtained a contract in
Berlin, where she sang with some success. On 10 September 1775, at
St. Hedwig's, in the
Opernplatz, Berlin, Antoinette married Claude-Philippe Croisilles de Saint-Huberty, who claimed to be
Prince Henry of Prussia's
chargé d'affaires and the recruiter of new talent for the Prince's private opera company. The marriage immediately ran into difficulties. Croisilles was an incorrigible gambler; he was also a wife-beater. On a number of occasions they had to sell items of clothing and jewellery in order to meet his debts. Before long, he was one of the combatants in a duel, after which it became necessary for them to flee Berlin. The couple aimed to reach Paris, but had to stop for a time in Strasbourg after running out of money. An alternative account of Antoinette's early years as a singer, which appears to have its roots in Edmond de Goncourt's
Saint-Huberty and was subsequently taken up unquestioningly by a number of other writers, runs as follows. By the age of twelve she had mastered everything her father was able to teach her, and her vocal tuition was therefore entrusted to other masters, possibly attached to
Strasbourg Cathedral. At fifteen she was a star performer at the local opera house in Strasbourg. Contract offers arrived from other cities such as
Lyon and
Bordeaux, but her parents were concerned that living away from home might lead her into temptation, and the offers were declined. Croisilles
dit Saint-Huberty arrived in Strasbourg, and convinced her that he could launch her into a glittering operatic career. She eloped with him to Berlin, where they married, but his duplicity quickly became apparent. He left her, but she followed him to Warsaw, where he stole her goods and abandoned her again. She was rescued by one of the Lubomirska princesses and began singing in Warsaw with some success. Croisilles then lured her (by letter) to Vienna, with more false promises; he stole from and abandoned her yet again, after which she repaired alone to Paris.
Career at the Paris Opera Antoinette sang at the theatre in Strasbourg until 1777, but her quickly-growing reputation soon led to her being engaged by the
Paris Opera. On 23 September 1777, she made her début at the première of
Gluck's
Armide in the minor roles of Mélisse and a Pleasure. This performance brought her only modest success. All too often her acting was impaired by her extreme nervousness, and
Gossec recalled that even though she was a good musician, her repeated failure to enthuse the Parisian public led to her being dismissed by the Opéra at one point, although
Jacques de Vismes later readmitted her. Encouraged by Gluck, she worked hard to improve her singing and acting skills and to amend her slightly German accent, and eventually was allotted major parts, beginning with Angelique in
Piccinni's
Roland in 1780. The award of this role was an important step in Saint-Huberty's career, and reflects
Dauvergne's confidence in her abilities and her potential. In the meantime, the problems with her marriage continued. Crosilles de Saint-Huberty, who was now a storekeeper at the Paris Opéra, still appropriated Antoinette's jewellery and other personal effects, which he then sold or pawned, and it is evident that by summer 1778 the couple were living apart – he in rue des Orties, Saint-Rioch, and she in rue de l'Arbre-Sec. On 31 July 1778, Antoinette sought an injunction for the return of some papers, effects and sheet-music which, she alleged, he had stolen from her apartment whilst she had been at the Opéra. Her husband's defence was that, being married, their goods were held jointly, and that Antoinette, acting on bad advice, had illegally abandoned their family home to live elsewhere. On that basis, he applied to be accompanied by Antoinette's lawyer, Chénon
fils, when he went to her apartment in the early morning of 31 August (his wife was still in bed) to seize items of furniture and a parcel of twenty-two letters (which, it appeared, were
lettres de galanterie). Antoinette fought and screamed so loudly during this visit that she feared she might have damaged her voice. Chénon later considered it appropriate to submit a detailed report of the incident to the Lieutenant of Police. Nevertheless, in January 1781 Antoinette was able to obtain an
annulment of her marriage: for a woman to be victorious after legal proceedings of this sort was extremely rare in France at that time. Edwards holds that the judges' decision was chiefly made on the grounds that it had been contracted when she was a minor and without her parents' consent, as her widowed mother, who was the main
plaintiff in the case, confirmed. The fact that no children had been born from the marriage could well have been another factor in Antoinette's favour. Antoinette obtained official permission to retain her married name, Madame Saint-Huberty, for professional purposes after the annulment. With regard to the
orthography – Huberty or Huberti, she herself invariably used a "y" in her signature. Once she had established herself as one of the leading singers at the Opéra following her successes of the early 1780s, Saint-Huberty became increasingly demanding and difficult for the management to deal with. At a time when professional indiscipline and petulance amongst the artists of the Opéra was all too common, she soon became known as the worst of the troublemakers. However, the early death of
Marie-Joséphine Laguerre on 14 February 1783 and the retirement around that time of the two other principal sopranos,
Rosalie Duplant and
Rosalie Levasseur, enabled her to cement her position as leading
premier sujet du chant of the Paris Opéra. By 1782 – a year in which Saint-Huberty earned 5,500
livres, which was high by Paris Opéra standards, although when compared with the leading Italian theatres, not a particularly large amount for an artist with her appeal at the box-office – she was considered indispensable by the Opéra administration, who decided to renegotiate her contract by offering her a further 1,500 livres from Court funds: an amount originally destined for M.lle Laguerre. Antoinette responded that she would have to think the matter over. Soon afterwards she issued her demands: (i) 3,000 livres for major roles each time she sang them; (ii) an additional "gratification" fee to be paid whenever she appeared; (iii) an immediate one-off payment of 3,000 livres; (iv) a further 1,500 livres annually from the King's music fund; (v) two months' holiday every year, to include the Easter closure; (vi) no role of hers could be assigned to any other singer without her consent. On 22 March 1783 she settled for an eight-year contract worth a guaranteed minimum of 9,000 livres per annum, and compliance with her other demands, although the Minister expressed his confidence that she would, from time to time, allow others to sing the roles which she had created. She was required, on her word of honour, never to disclose her new salary arrangements to any of her colleagues for fear that it might cause unrest. ,
Madame de Saint-Huberty in the role of Didon, 1785, (
NWMA, Washington DC) Saint-Huberty's financial position improved further after the enormous success she obtained in the role of Didon in
Piccinni's opera of the same name in 1783.
Louis XVI, who was never a great lover of opera, insisted on hearing it three times. Declaring that it "had given him as much pleasure as a fine tragedy," he gave instructions that Saint-Huberty be paid a further pension of 1,500 livres
per annum. Her biographers agree that Didon was the greatest success of Saint-Huberty's career, and, given her qualities as an outstanding tragedienne, a role to which she was particularly well suited. Evidence of the enormous popularity which she enjoyed among opera enthusiasts is provided by the triumphal reception she received on visiting
Marseille in 1785, and throughout the 1780s she was one of the most famous and most celebrated singers in Europe. Her holiday months were spent touring the French provincial theatres, sometimes appearing in two performances on the same day, and it has been estimated that her earnings from each of these tours was possibly as high as 16,000 livres, substantially more than she received in an entire year from the Opéra. Some primary sources maintain that, from around 1786, Saint-Huberty's voice began to deteriorate alarmingly. One of these was Dauvergne, the director of the Opéra, who had long been exasperated by Saint-Huberty's erratic and volatile behaviour. He mentioned her vocal deterioration in a memorandum dated 21 July 1787, where he complained that she had had to withdraw from several important roles which she no longer felt capable of singing. He complained that whilst she was happy to perform twice a day when on tour, she insisted on limiting her performances at the Opéra to one (or occasionally two) per week. He predicted that her singing career would be over within two years – or less, if she were to undertake another provincial tour. In a letter of 8 November 1786, Gossec commented that Saint-Huberty was rushing inexorably towards her own destruction. However, both Dauvergne and Gossec expressed concern that no obvious candidate could take her place – indicating that, in 1786/87, she was still regarded, by the director and the head of the
École de chant, as the pre-eminent soprano at the Opéra, and one whom they considered was some way ahead of M.lle Maillard (
premier sujet) and M.lle Dozon (
premier remplacement). De Goncourt listed the number of Saint-Huberty's appearances at the Opéra between 1780 and 1789: Provided that de Goncourt's figures are reasonably accurate, it seems that Saint-Huberty reduced her appearances at the Opéra as soon as she had consolidated her position there. In the final three years of her career, she created only one new role, which is in marked contrast with what was happening previously. By 1787, however, her motivation appears to have almost entirely evaporated, and to the management she had become a thorough nuisance. In the spring of that year she wrote to Dauvergne to express her "disgust and vexation" brought about by the theatre administration's "continual complaints". She claimed that her health was being adversely affected, and she was seriously considering retirement. This tension continued until 1790. She became the mistress of , a rich Italian music-lover who owned a magnificent villa (the ) near
Mendrisio on the Swiss-Italian border. At the same time, she was the mistress of
Louis-Alexandre de Launay, comte d'Antraigues, whom she met in 1783 and took as a lover during the latter half of 1784. This double liaison has been interpreted as follows: Turconi was "the man who was willing to pay the bills," whereas d'Antraigues was more of a gallant-adventurer and the man she preferred. Both men were aware of the situation, but appear to have accepted it. Turconi purchased a small
château at Groslay in the vale of Montmorency as a gift for Antoinette, yet d'Antraigues was able to have his own room there. D'Antraigues was not the most faithful of lovers: Duckworth maintains that he was conducting a simultaneous affair with at least one of the ladies at court. Prior to the
French Revolution, d'Antraigues had been broadly in sympathy with many of the ideas which became revolutionary ideals. On 4 April 1789 he was elected to the
Estates General as a representative of the
noblesse of the province of
Vivarais. However, later that year his attitude underwent a profound change, and he became a counter-revolutionary. On 27 February 1790, after being implicated in a plot to help the royal family escape from the
Tuileries Palace, he fled France and made for
Lausanne in
Switzerland. On or around 3 April 1790, having obtained a passport, Antoinette left Paris with her chamber-maid and two other servants to join d'Antrigues as an
émigré. She never sung at the Opéra again. The property at Groslay was seized a few months after her departure, and some of its contents sold by order of the district authorities at
Gonesse, despite the formal protests of her sister.
Repertoire The operas in which Mme. Saint-Huberty appeared include the following:
Costume design, and influence on fashion At the time when Madame Saint-Huberty began her career, it was customary for actors and singers who performed female roles drawn from
Classical mythology to wear highly unauthentic wigs and
hoop skirts, sometimes with a
train borne by
pages. After she became a
premier sujet du chant, Saint-Huberty insisted that her theatrical costumes should reflect, as accurately as possible, the period in which the drama was set. She would therefore consult with the artist
Jean-Michel Moreau, and have her costumes prepared to her own specifications in
Greek or
Roman style. This caused a great amount of vexation to the management of the Opéra, since it added what they considered to be an unreasonable amount to the costs of a production and it also set dangerous precedents, but the move was well-received by audiences. On one occasion in 1783, in an attempt to achieve authenticity, she appeared on the stage with naked legs and with one breast exposed, which led to the government subsequently forbidding such practices. Nevertheless, her innovations in the field of costume design, when taken as a whole, are judged to have been of significant importance. Saint-Huberty also had an influence, albeit a slighter one, on fashion. Her enormous success in
Didon inspired the design of an elegant gentleman's
waistcoat, in embroidered silk, depicting the scene in which Didon is abandoned by Énée. Since 1962 the waistcoat has formed part of the collection of the
Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum in New York, although it is not currently (October 2013) on public display. The figure of Didon is based upon a portrait by
André Dutertre of Madame Saint-Huberty in the role. An engraved version of this portrait later became very popular as a print. ==Later years==