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===Return to Paris, European tour, ''Fédora'' to ''Theodora'' (1881–1886)=== [[File:Sarah Bernhardt - Foedora.png|thumb|upright=1.3|As ''Fédora'' by [[Victorien Sardou]] (1882)]] No crowd greeted Bernhardt when she returned to Paris on 5 May 1881, and theatre managers offered no new roles; the Paris press ignored her tour, and much of the Paris theatre world resented her leaving the most prestigious national theatre to earn a fortune abroad.{{Sfn|Skinner|1967|pages=198–99}} When no new plays or offers appeared, she went to London for a successful three-week run at the Gaiety Theater. This London tour included the first British performance of ''La Dame aux Camelias'' at the Shaftesbury Theatre; her friend, the prince of Wales, persuaded [[Queen Victoria]] to authorise the performance.{{Sfn|Tierchant|2009|page=176}} Many years later, she gave a private performance of the play for the queen while she was on holiday in Nice.{{Sfn|Skinner|1967|page=105}} When she returned to Paris, Bernhardt contrived to make a surprise performance at the annual 14 July patriotic spectacle at the Paris Opera, which was attended by the President of France, and a houseful of dignitaries and celebrities. She recited the ''Marseillaise'', dressed in a white robe with a tricolor banner, and at the end dramatically waved the French flag. The audience gave her a standing ovation, showered her with flowers, and demanded that she recite the song two more times.{{Sfn|Skinner|1967|pages=200–202}} With her place in the French theatre world restored, Bernhardt negotiated a contract to perform at the Vaudeville Theatre in Paris for 1500 francs per performance as well as 25 percent of the net profit. She also announced that she would not be available to begin until 1882. She departed on a tour of theatres in the French provinces and then to Italy, Greece, Hungary, Switzerland, Belgium, Holland, Spain, Austria, and Russia. In [[Kyiv]] and [[Odessa]], she encountered anti-Semitic crowds who threw stones at her; [[pogroms]] were being conducted, forcing the Jewish population to leave.{{Sfn|Tierchant|2009|page=186}} However, in Moscow and St. Petersburg, she performed before Czar [[Alexander III of Russia|Alexander III]], who broke court protocol and bowed to her. During her tour, she gave performances for King [[Alfonso XII]] of Spain, and the Emperor [[Franz Joseph I of Austria]]. The only European country where she refused to play was Germany, due to the German annexation of French territory after the 1870–71 Franco-Prussian War.{{Sfn|Skinner|1967|pages=206–208}} Just before the tour began, she met [[Jacques Damala]], who went with her as leading man and then, for eight months, became her first and only husband. {{See below|1=Personal life}} [[File:Sarah Bernhardt as Theodora by Nadar.jpg|thumb|left|''Theodora'', photo by Nadar (1884)]] When she returned to Paris, she was offered a new role in ''[[Fédora]]'', a melodrama written for her by [[Victorien Sardou]]. It opened on 12 December 1882, with her husband Damala as the male lead, and received good reviews. English novelist Maurice Baring, who wrote a biography of Bernhardt, wrote "a secret atmosphere emanated from her, an aroma, an attraction, which was at once exotic and cerebral...She literally hypnotised her audience."{{Sfn|Skinner|1967|pages=217–218}} Another journalist wrote "She is incomparable...The extreme love, the extreme agony, the extreme suffering."{{Sfn|Tierchant|2009|page=195}} However, the abrupt end of her marriage shortly after the premiere put her back into financial distress. She had leased and refurbished a theatre, the Ambigu, specifically to give her husband leading roles, and made her 18-year-old son Maurice, who had no business experience, the manager. ''Fédora'' ran for just 50 performances and lost 400,000 francs. She was forced to give up the Ambigu, and then, in February 1883, to sell her jewellery, her carriages, and her horses at an auction.{{Sfn|Tierchant|2009|pages=196–197}} When Damala left, she took on a new leading man and lover, the poet and playwright [[Jean Richepin]], who accompanied her on a quick tour of European cities to help pay off her debts.{{Sfn|Skinner|1967| pages=224–226}} She renewed her relationship with the Prince of Wales, the future King [[Edward VII]].{{Sfn|Tierchant|2009|page=200}} When they returned to Paris, Bernhardt leased the theatre of Porte Saint-Martin and starred in ''Nana-Sahib'', a new play by Richepin, a costume drama about love in British India in 1857. The play and Richepin's acting were poor, and it quickly closed.{{Sfn|Tierchant|2009|page=202}} Richepin then wrote an adaptation of ''[[MacBeth|Macbeth]]'' in French, with Bernhardt as [[Lady Macbeth]], but it was also a failure. The only person who praised the play was [[Oscar Wilde]], who was then living in Paris. He wrote a play, ''[[Salome (play)|Salomé]]'', and Bernhardt planned to originate the title role in London, but British censors banned the play and she never performed it.{{Sfn|Skinner|1967|pages=228–229}} Bernhardt then performed a new play by Sardou, ''Theodora'' (1884), a melodrama set in sixth-century [[Byzantine Empire]]. Sardou wrote a nonhistoric but dramatic new death scene for Bernhardt; in his version, the empress [[Theodora (wife of Justinian I)|Theodora]] was publicly strangled, whereas the historical empress died of cancer. Bernhardt travelled to Ravenna, Italy, to study and sketch the costumes seen in Byzantine mosaic murals, and had them reproduced for her own costumes. The play opened on 26 December 1884 and ran for 300 performances in Paris and 100 in London, and it was a financial success. She was able to pay off most of her debts, and bought a lion cub, which she named Justinian, for her home menagerie.{{Sfn|Tierchant|2009|pages=210–211}} She also renewed her love affair with her former lead actor, Philippe Garnier.{{Sfn|Skinner|1967| pages=232–233}}
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