With its dazzling Belle Epoque facade and famous pink
dome, the gracious Negresco Hotel in Nice is celebrating its 100th
anniversary this year. It’s one of only three five-star hotels in Nice and it fills
up a full city block—in both directions--on the Promenade des Anglais, facing the sweeping Baie
des Anges of the Mediterranean Sea. While the Negresco may not be the largest or
flashiest hotel on the Cote d’Azur, it definitely has one of the most colorful
histories. Like the time Richard Burton forgot Liz Taylor’s million dollar
emeralds on a bar stool...or Michael Jackson dressing up like a hooker so he
could slip out of the hotel unnoticed...or James Brown chasing his wife around the hotel in a
jealous rage in the middle of the night...
Those are just a few of the many stories that got out.
Imagine the ones that didn’t!
A bit of backstory: In 1893, a young Romanian named
Henri Negrescu, the son of an innkeeper and a gypsy violinist, arrived in Monte
Carlo to seek his fortune. Through his
jobs at the Helder Hotel and the Municipal Casino of Nice, he met the
celebrated French/Dutch architect Edouard Niermans (creator of the
Moulin Rouge and Folies Bergères)
and financier Alexandre Darracq. Negrescu talked up his dream hotel with Darracq, who
agreed to back him, while Niermans was signed on as the architect. None other
than Gustave Eiffel was chosen to construct the framework of one of Europe’s
most beautiful glass domes, which became the centerpiece of the hotel’s Salon
Royal. For the hotel’s name, Henri chose his given name as a French citizen.
The Negresco first opened her doors in
1912, then after a brief hiatus, officially launched in January, 1913, boasting
innovations such as a steam autoclave, electric switches, and an internal tube
system for distributing mail to every room. The hotel quickly lured a
glittering international clientele and had an enormously successful first
season, “earning a profit of 800,000 gold francs.’’
When World War I broke out, Henri (by
then a Knight of the Legion of Honneur) transformed his beloved Negresco into a
hospital, paying for the upkeep of 100 beds himself. Later, the hotel fell
into severe financial difficulty, was seized by creditors and was then
purchased by a Belgian company. Meanwhile poor Henri died penniless in
Paris in 1920, aged 52.
Fast forward to 1957, when Monsieur Jean-Baptiste
Mesnage and his wife bought the Negresco and moved in. Their daughter Jeanne
Augier, today age 89, still lives on site and is involved in every aspect of
operations. I’m told she’s the last private owner of any Riviera palace
hotel...and that the Sultan of Brunei and Bill Gates, among many others, have
tried to buy her out. An endowment fund was set up long ago to ensure the
Negresco’s future, with beneficiaries including humanitarian causes, French art
programs and animal welfare charities. (Pets are very welcome at the hotel and
Madame Augier’s beloved cat Carmen spends most of the day dozing in a leather
chair in the bar.)
Passionate about French art and
antiques, Madame Augier was already a serious collector by her early
20s. And the Negresco’s walls have always been the perfect backdrop
for her collection. Today, the Negresco is the only hotel in France that
employs a full time curator (Mr. Pierre Couette) for its art and antiques, a
collection that numbers roughly 5,000 pieces. And Jeanne Augier is still adding
to it, her goal being ‘’to present an overall view of the great periods of
French Art.’’
Artists, of course, figure prominently
in guestbook; Dali, Matisse and Picasso were regulars; Chagall and Cocteau
loved the hotel. Show biz types have long treated the Negresco as their base on
the Cote d’Azur: Alain Delon, Cary Grant, Lauren Bacall, Frank Sinatra, The
Beatles, Elton John, Edith Piaf, Charles Aznavour...the list goes on and on.
Ava Gardener and Ernest Hemingway have been guests, as have Jacques Chirac,
Winston Churchill, countless Royals and heads of state.
Stories of the Negresco’s rich and
famous clientele—and their hijinks—could easily fill a book. Indeed, the
hotel has always indulged quirky behaviour.
Prince Turki, brother of the King of
Saudi Arabia, arrived with a 50-person entourage, 1,000 pieces of luggage, and
his own furniture...all of it packed in a moving van. There were 15 cases for
the Prince’s shoes alone. The local fire brigade was called to clear the entrance
hall, so the Princely possessions could make it through the lobby.
Once during a power outage, the pianist
Arthur Rubinstein refused to climb the four floors to his room. He asked for
two pillows, a blanket, an 8 am wake-up call with breakfast and Champagne...and
then settled in for the night in the Salon Louis XIV.
Anthony Quinn arrived with 20 suitcases
containing 100 of his wife’s evening gowns...and an unusual request. He wanted
a white Cadillac--with chauffeur--and a bicycle. He used the bike throughout
his stay in Nice, disappearing each morning into traffic...followed by his wife
in the Cadillac. Quinn stayed at the hotel three months while shooting A
Star for Two with Lauren Bacall.
It was around 1970 when Richard Burton,
in love and rather distracted, was chatting to the barman and showing him the
fabulous emerald necklace and earrings he planned to give his wife Liz Taylor,
when she called down and asked her husband to come up to the room. A half an
hour later, the barman discovered the jewels on a bar stool, where Burton had
forgotten them.
Michael Jackson came to stay in 1988,
bringing his own chef. After having transformed one of the rooms
into a kitchen, he installed a dance floor in another room so that he could
rehearse. In order to leave the hotel unnoticed, he disguised himself “as a
hippie, an English gentleman, a delivery boy and a prostitute.’’
Once, a passing student stopped to
admire a magnificent Hispano Suiza parked in front of the hotel and allegedly
said, “You have to be a King to own such a car!’’ Rudolf Valentino
tapped him on the shoulder and asked, “Would you like to be King? Then get in,
my chauffeur will drive you wherever you want. You’ll be a King for a day.’’
And then there was the rock band that
stole one of Madame Augier’s favourite paintings, a present from her parents on
her 21st birthday. I can’t say who the band was or how the
heist was found out, but the band was apprehended at the airport and the painting
was returned in perfect condition.
Late this summer, the Negresco threw
itself an enormous birthday party, with Madame Augier playing elegant host to
500 guests, friends and local dignitaries. Other celebrations and promotions
were being staged throughout the year, but the most joyous gift of all came in
March 2012, when the folks at the Michelin Guide called to say
they’d be giving the Negresco’s restaurant Chantecler its
coveted second star back after bumping them down to one star in the Guide
Rouge eight years ago. (The hotel’s first two-star review had
originally been earned back in 1980 by the wildly talented but notoriously
eccentric Jacques Maximin, chef at Negresco from 1978 to 1988. (Maximin now has
the Bistrot de la Marine in Cros de
Cagnes, ten minutes from the Nice Airport.)
Credit for the second Michelin star
goes to Negresco chef Jean-Denis Rieubland, who joined the hotel in 2007 and
immediately set out to win it back. Born in Agen, France,
Rieubland trained at the Lycée Hôtelier in Nice, then went on to work at
top hotels and restaurants such as The Carlton (Cannes), La Tour d’Argent (Paris),
and the Four Seasons Resort Provence at Terre Blanche (no longer a Four
Seasons, it’s now called just Terre Blanche). Rieubland earned his Meilleur
Ouvrier de France (‘’Best Craftsmen in France’’) title in 2007.
Among Rieubland’s many contributions to
the Negresco is the farm-to-table system he set up, turning his family’s own
farm--about 35 minutes from the hotel—into his private potager.Rieubland
works closely with his father, Jean François, to select the varieties
they’ll grow each season, on 17 hectares of terraced, hilltop beds. Jean
François drives the produce down to the Negresco twice a week and
Rieubland says that cooking with just-picked ingredients grown to his exact
specs is “one of the greatest luxuries of all.’’
Hearty kudos also goes out to
restaurant manager Olivier Novelli, who was hired to run the Chantecler dining
room in late 2009. Before that, he’d worked at Château de la Chevre d’Or (Eze),
Le Mas Candille (Mougins), and with Rieubland at the
Miramar Beach Hotel. Novelli earned his own Meilleur Ouvrier de France title
in 2011, one of just four candidates (out of 59) to attain the impressive
distinction that year.
The Chantecler is now Michelin's highest
rated restaurant in Nice. (A list of all the starred restaurants in the Alpes
Maritimes region appears here.)
In honor of the 100th anniversary,
the Negresco completed a €10 million, 18-month renovation in June 2011. Among
the upgrades were an entire kitchen re-do and a transformation of the
restaurant La Rotonde,
which now has a lovely terrace facing the sea. The façade was also
restored and 30 guestrooms were redone.
If you’ve never experienced Negresco,
there are a few nice ways to do it even if you can’t spend the night. You can
dine at Chantecler of
course, or the more-casual, family friendly La Rotonde, which serves brasserie
fare all day. (They’re currently offering an 18€ plat du jour at
lunch; a 22€ lunch special including main course, little desserts and
coffee; and a full à la carte menu.)
Live music continues in the Le Relais bar,
every night from 7:30 onwards. Jazz Night is the first Thursday of the month,
at 9 pm.
A small but worthwhile exhibit covering
the Negresco’s colourful 100-year history remains on view in the Salon Royal,
free and open to the public, from 3 pm to 6 pm daily, until January
5.
Meanwhile, the centenary celebration
runs through June 2013 with a series of events this spring ‘’highlighting
French creativity.’’
According to the Negresco’s director,
the charming Pierre Bord: ‘’There are few hotels on the Cote
d’Azur—few hotels anywhere—that have seen what the Negresco has….and lived to
tell about it! While independent hotels up and down the coast continue to be
acquired or replaced by chains, Negresco remains steadfastly independent and
highly personal. And after an amazing 100 years, the hotel’s original
personality remains intact: formal but friendly, rich in history and
ready to party! There are always surprises here…you never know what will
happen. And now that this Grand Dame has had her face lift, she’s as glittering
and sparkling as ever. Here’s to the next century!’’
For info, rates and reservations at the Negresco, click here.
Photos: 1. The Negresco has been likened to a giant wedding cake. 2.
Executive chef Jean-Denis Rieubland loves to tromp around his father's farm,
where produce is grown to the chef's exact specs. 3. Madame Augier's cat Carmen
is a fixture in the Relais Bar. 4, 5. The dining room and a typically lovely
presentation in the restaurant Chantecler. 7. You know who, on the beach at
Negresco, June 30, 1965. 8. Image once used on luggage tags and posters. 9. The
100th Anniversary Birthday cake, made by pastry chef Fabien Cocheteux. 10.
Seen from the sea. 11. Bienvenue a Negresco!