- Napoleon in popular culture
Napoleon Bonaparte, Emperor of the French, has become a worldwide
cultural icon symbolizingstrength ,genius , andmilitary andpolitical power . Since his death, countlesstown s,street s,ship s, and even cartoon characters have been named after him. At the same time, however, he has become acliché and a comic figure inpopular culture . Today thiscaricature of Napoleon often overshadows the real historical figure.However during the
Napoleonic Wars he was taken more seriously by the English as a threateningtyrant , poised to invade their island. Anursery rhyme warned children that Bonaparte ravenously ate naughty people. [" [http://www.napoleon.org/en/fun_stuff/dico/index.asp Bogeyman] ", "Period glossary", " [http://www.napoleon.org/en/home.asp Napoleon.org] ". Retrieved 07-03-2007 .] His contracted last name 'Boney' became 'Bogey' and then 'bogeyman '.The
stock character of Napoleon is generally comically short, indignant, and bossy; the literal embodiment of the "petty tyrant". The historical accuracy of Napoleon being short is questionable, but he certainly was not as short as commonly depicted. He is often portrayed wearing a comically largebicorne hat, often with a big 'N' badge, and shown with one hand tucked inside his coat as in the famousportrait of Napoleon byJacques-Louis David .Books
*Napoleon is an important character in
Tolstoy 's classic novel,War and Peace , where considerable space is devoted to Tolstoy's interpretation of his historical role. He consequently also appears in the adaptations and films of this novel, listed in the following section.*Napoleon is a character in
George Orwell 's "Animal Farm ", being apig who strongly resemblesJoseph Stalin .*
Bernard Cornwell 's novel "Sharpe's Devil " features a meeting between Napoleon, and the fictional Richard Sharpe.*He is featured in the
manga "Eikou no Napoleon – Eroica ", written by the manga artistRiyoko Ikeda .*Napoleon features prominently in the
BBC Past Doctor Adventure "World Game", where theSecond Doctor must avert a plot to change history so that Napoleon is victorious. In an alternate timeline created by the assassination of the Duke of Wellington prior to Waterloo, Napoleon is persuaded to march on to Russia after the victory of Waterloo, but he dies shortly afterwards, his empire having become so overextended that the various countries collapse back into the separate nations they were before, thus degenerating into a state of perpetual warfare (Although this situation is made worse due to the intervention of the Doctor's old enemies the Players)Film and television
* "Napoleon" (1918) Louis Feuillade - France/black&white/silent
* "Napoleon" (1920) Bud Fisher - USA/Animation/short
* "Napoleon" (1927)Albert Dieudonné - France/black&white/epic silentAbel Gance
* "Napoleon" (1955)Sacha Guitry - France/color/withOrson Welles ,Raymond Pellegrin
* "War and Peace" (1956)Herbert Lom - USA/Italian productionDino De Laurentiis ,King Vidor
* "Austerlitz" (1960) Pierre Mondy -Abel Gance
* "War and Peace" (1968) - Soviet film,Sergei Bondarchuk
* "Waterloo" (1970)Rod Steiger -Dino De Laurentiis /Sergei Bondarchuk , Soviet-Italian production. Film attempts to even-sidedly depict theBattle of Waterloo and the events that led to it. The film abstains from either wholly endorsing or condemning Napoleon or the English commander, Wellington.
* "Napoleon & Josephine" (1987)Armand Assante - USA miniseries on ABC
* "Napóleon" (1989) Péter Rudolf - Hungarian TV movie
* "Napoléon et l'Europe" (1991) Jean-François Stévenin - French TV series
* "Napoleon" (2002)Christian Clavier - A&E miniseries based on series of books byMax Gallo , directed byYves Simoneau
* "Monsieur N" (2003) Philippe Torreton
*Stanley Kubrick worked on a film project about Napoleon; he never made it and put all his research efforts into theAcademy Award -winning film "Barry Lyndon ".*He appears as a character in the
time travel ingcomedy film "Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure ", wherein he discovers a fondness forice cream andwaterslide s.*Napoleon is a recurring character in "
Jack of All Trades ".*The
Yu-Gi-Oh! GX character Vice-Chancellor Bonaparte is based on the cliché Napoleon: he is short (see the debate on Napoleon's height below), pudgy, French, has a short temper, and dresses similarly to Napoleon.*In the series
Robot Chicken , Jon Heder (who played Napoleon Dynamite), voiced Napoleon Bonamite. A cross between Napoleon Dynamite's personality and Bonaparte's outfit, life, and setting.*An animated caricature of Napoleon appeared as a semi-regular on the
Warner Bros. series "Histeria! " Here, he spoke likeHervé Villechaize , who also was French and short in stature. Napoleon hates to be reminded of his short stature (in the episode "When Time Collides!", Miss Information mistakes him for aleprechaun ), and he also likes to play thetambourine , which he keeps behind his coat (hence why he keeps his hand in it, as he states in "Great Heroes of France").* In the famous
Iran ian novel, later turned into a successful TV show, "My Uncle Napoleon ", the main character, Daaee Jaan, loves Napoleon so much that he starts to believe he is him.* A clone of Napoleon is an occasional minor character in the
MTV series "Clone High ". He is extremely diminutive, somewhat disliked, and has a management position at T.G.I.Chili's . Abe Lincoln claims he has some kind of complex.* Napoleon appears in the
Terry Gilliam film "Time Bandits ", endlessly reciting the heights of very short but highly eminent people (although whether he himself was short is the subject of some debate - see below).*
Johnny Whitaker played the half-title role of Napoleon inJodie Foster 's first filmNapoleon and Samantha (1972)
* In Speed Racer Episode 12, (Race For Revenge) The Melange was a topless racing car numbered with a "3" driven by racer Slash Marker. The Melange was named directly after Napoleon's horse, who saved his life several times in battles.(1967)* During their September 28, 2008 NFL game against rival Kansas City, CBS sportscaster
Dan Dierdorf comparedDenver Broncos head coachMike Shanahan 's difficulties with them to Napoleon, saying, "If Mike Shanahan was Napoleon, then this is his Waterloo." The line was then shortly after quoted byESPN sports columnistBill Simmons , who in turn requuested, of the general public, that it be specifically referenced on the NapoleonWikipedia page. [ [http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=simmons/081003 Simmons: Week 5 picks] ]Music
*The
Tori Amos song "Josephine" from her 1999 album "To Venus and Back " is sung from the viewpoint of Napoleon during his unsuccessful invasion ofRussia .*The
Mark Knopfler song "Done with Bonaparte" from his 1996 album "Golden Heart " is sung from the viewpoint of a soldier in Napoleon's army. The song recalls the soldier's many battles serving in Napoleon's Grande Armee.*The
Ani DiFranco song "Napoleon" satirizes the desire to continuously "conquer"; more specifically musicians who sign with big labels - thus employing "an army of suits" in order to "make a killing" rather than just "make a living".*
Napoleon XIV was the pseudonym of comic singerJerry Samuels , who sangThey're Coming to Take Me Away Ha-Haaa! from the point of view of a person about to be sent to an insane asylum.*French pop/rock band Phoenix recorded a song called "Napoleon Says".
*Glaswegian band
We Are The Physics have a song called "Napoleon Loves Josephine".*Swedish Pop group Abba won the Eurovision song contest with "Waterloo", A battle loss that Napoleon suffered in 1815.
Napoleon's height
British propaganda of the time depicted Napoleon as of smaller than average height (see contemporary caricature right) and the image of him as a small man persists in modern Britain. However, because the French inch of the time equalled 2.7 centimetres, while the Imperial inch is 2.54 centimeters,cite web|title=Weights and Measures|url=http://www.historydata.com/miscellaneous.html#linear| accessdate=2008-05-30|publisher=historydata.com] some have argued he was 1.68m and others 1.58m. This equates to average height for the time or slightly shorter. [Napoleon's height was put at around 5 ft 2 ins by three French sources (his valet Constant, General Gourgaud, and
Francesco Antommarchi at Napoleon's autopsy) which on the French scale equals around 1.68m. (cite web|url=http://www.1789-1815.com/bonap_taille.htm|title=La taille de Napoléon Bonaparte (Napoleon Bonaparte's height)|date=2002-11-25|accessdate=2008-05-28|publisher=www.1789-1815.com) Two English sources (Andrew Darling and John Foster) put his height at around 5 ft 7 ins, equivalent, on the Imperial scale, to 1.70m. This would have made him around average height for a Frenchman of the time. (cite web|url=http://www.napoleon.org/fr/salle_lecture/articles/files/Taillenapo_RIN_89_oct1963_2006.asp|title=La taille de Napoléon (Napoleon's height)|accessdate=2008-05-30|publisher=La Fondation Napoléon cite web|title=How tall was Napoleon?| url=http://www.napoleon.org/en/essential_napoleon/faq/index.asp#ancre54|publisher=La Fondation Napoléon|accessdate=2005-12-18) Nonetheless, some historians have claimed Napoleon would have been measured with a British measure at his autopsy, since he was under British control at St Helena, implying the 5 ft 2 ins is an Imperial measure, equal to about 1.58 meters. On the other hand,Francesco Antommarchi , Napoleon's personal physician, despised the English, considered their touch "polluting," and may never have used their yardstick to measure his emperor. (cite book |last= Antommarchi |first= F. G |title= The Last Days of Napoleon: Memoirs of the Last Two Years of Napoleon's Exile |url= http://books.google.com/books?id=MnEuAAAAMAAJ |accessdate= 2007-11-01 |year=1826|publisher=H.Colburn|location=London|pages= [http://books.google.com/books?id=MnEuAAAAMAAJ&printsec=titlepage#PRA1-PA157,M1 p157] )]Napoleon's nickname of "le petit caporal" has added to the confusion, as some non-
Francophones have mistakenly interpreted "petit" by its literal meaning of "small". In fact, it is an affectionate term reflecting on his camaraderie with ordinary soldiers. "Petit ami" and "petite amie" are French for "boyfriend" and "girlfriend", and "mon petit chou" ["my little cabbage"] is a term of affection.Napoleon also surrounded himself with the soldiers of his elite guard, who were usually six feet or taller.
Whether truly short or not, Napoleon's name has been lent to the
Napoleon complex , a colloquial term describing an alleged type ofinferiority complex which is said to affect some people who are physically short. The term is used more generally to describe people who are driven by a perceived handicap to overcompensate in other aspects of their lives.Napoleonic delusions of grandeur
Napoleon Bonaparte is one of the most famous humans in the
Western world . As delusional patients sometimes believe themselves to be an important or grandiose figure (seeDelusion ), he was a notable object of such delusions.This idea has often been used in popular culture:
*In the 1922 film "Mixed Nuts",
Stan Laurel plays a book salesman whose only volume for sale is a biography of Napoleon. When the character receives a blow to the head, he comes to believe that he is Napoleon and is subsequently admitted to a mental institution. [Garza, Janiss,Allmovie . " [http://movies2.nytimes.com/gst/movies/movie.html?v_id=269496 Mixed Nuts (1925)] ", Review Summary, "The New York Times ". Retrieved 09-25-2006 .]*In "
Asterix and the Big Fight ", one of the druid Psychoanalytix’s patients has adopted Napoleon typical posture and a bicorne. The nurse comments that no one knows who he thinks he is.*In
1966 Napoleon topped the American charts when recording engineer Jerry Samuels renamed himselfNapoleon XIV for his record "They're Coming to Take Me Away Ha-Haaa! ", a song with a theme ofmental illness which featuredambulance sirens in the background. He also wrote another less popular song titled "Doin' the Napoleon".*In the
1968 episode "The Girl Who Was Death " of the television series "The Prisoner ", there are several mad scientist villains who appear dressed as Napoleon.*In one episode of
Monty Python's Flying Circus , there is an insane asylum with wards of people organized by delusion—there's the Napoleon Ward, and the King Richard III Ward. In another episode, Napoleon was credited as one of many famous people (includingJulius Caesar ) who liked to pretend to be mice.*In the film "",
Connor MacLeod uses a patient who believes himself to be Napoleon to escape a psychiatric ward, MacLeod pretends to be one of Napoleon's soldiers to convince him to help him.*In the sci-fi cartoon
Futurama , Bender pretends to be a singing,banjo -playing Napoleon in order to fit in at an insane asylum in the episode "Insane in the Mainframe ".*The video game
Psychonauts features an inmate named Fred Bonaparte in an insane asylum who is a direct descendant of Napoleon Bonaparte and has multiple personality disorder which was the end result of a massiveinferiority complex he developed. Half of him knows of his real identity and the other half thinks he is Napoleon.Parodies of the cliche
This cliché has itself been parodied:
*In the
Bugs Bunny film "Napoleon Bunny Part", the actual Napoleon is dragged away by psychiatric attendants, who believe he is delusional. [" [http://members.tripod.com/bugsbunnypage/scripts/napoleon.html Napoleon Bunny-part] ", "Scripts", [http://members.tripod.com/bugsbunnypage/ Delenea's Bugs Bunny Page] . Retrieved 07-18-2007 .]*In "The Emperor's New Clothes",
Ian Holm plays Napoleon who stumbles into the grounds of an asylum and finds himself surrounded by other "Napoleons" - he cannot reveal his identity for fear of being grouped with the deluded. [French, Philip ("The Observer "). " [http://film.guardian.co.uk/News_Story/Critic_Review/Observer_review/0,4267,1136245,00.html The Emperor's New Clothes] ", "The Guardian ", 02-04-2004 . Retrieved 07-19-2006 .] Holm also played a less-than-serious Napoleon in the1981 film "Time Bandits ".*The
Discworld novel "Making Money " features a character who believes himself to beLord Vetinari , imitating Vetinari'smannerism s and entertaining delusions of grandeur. It is later revealed that the local hospital has an entire ward for people with the same delusion, where they engage in competitions to determine who is the "real" Vetinari."Napoleon" as a first name
While the popularity of "Napoleon" as a first name never equaled that of other famous conquerors such as Alexander, it does occasionally occur. Salvadoran President
José Napoleón Duarte and Florida Governor Napoleon Bonaparte Broward were named after the emperor, as was formerNFL runningbackNapoleon Kaufman .Fictional characters named Napoleon include Napoleon 'Bony' Bonaparte, an Australian aboriginal detective created by the writer
Arthur Upfield ,Napoleon Dynamite , andNapoleon Solo , a spy from the novel, film and television seriesThe Man from U.N.C.L.E. .References
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