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Sur le Pont d'Avignon

"Sur le pont d'Avignon" () ("On the Bridge of Avignon"; ) is a French song about a dance performed on the Pont d'Avignon (officially Pont Saint-Bénézet) that dates back to the 15th century. The dance actually took place under the bridge and not on the bridge (, not ).

Dance description

  1. The dance starts out with everyone in pairs, dancing around each other.
  2. When the chorus is done dancers must stop in front of their partners, and traditionally the male will bow on the first part then tip his hat on the second.
  3. When the chorus begins again the dancers repeat step one.
  4. When this stops, so does the dance. The girl curtsies to one side, then the other.
  5. For the first part, dancers repeat step one, and if they have an audience, turn on their heels and bow to them.

Lyrics

Any number of verses may be invented, depicting other professions or various characters.

Melody

Source

In other media

In 1951, the National Film Board of Canada produced the 5-minute animated film Sur le pont d'Avignon, in which extravagantly dressed marionettes pantomime the song.

In 1992, a cartoon titled The Real Story of... Sur le pont d'Avignon was produced by CINAR and France Animation, featuring the song and a ghost story revolving around a clockmaker and an enchanted organ.

Mary Stewart's 1955 romantic thriller "Madam, Will You Talk?" is set in Avignon and features two of the main characters getting to know each other while on a day trip to "the old bridge of the song...its four remaining arches soaring out across the green water...". They sing the song "in the style of Jean Sablon," and the child character tells the adult "the story of St. Benezet who confounded the clerics of Avignon, and built the bridge where the angels had told him."

References

External links