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Mata Hari Part II: "Muse
and Mistress"
by Jamila Salimpour
When Margaretha Mac Leod, later
known as Mata Hari, returned to Holland from the Dutch East
Indies with her family in the year of 1905, she was certain
of one thing; she could no longer put up with her husband's
bullying. She had long since fallen out of love with him.
His jealousy, his womanizing, and physical abuse were a contradiction
to humanity but, since she had never worked and had no means
of support, it seemed during her marriage that there was no
way out. In contrast to her own unhappy existence, Europe,
mainly Paris, seemed to be overflowing with artistic activity;
Margaretha dreamed of unknown adventures.
Life with John Mac Leod consisted
mainly of long faces, daily squabbles, and threats of bodily
harm. When her would repent and promise Margaretha to change,
their infrequent public outings often ended in disastrous
accusations of Margaretha's flirting or some such things.
Many witnesses said she always remained composed during these
diatribes. Author Sam Waagenaar records in biography of Mata
Hari: "Margaretha, writing to her father, accused her
husband of maltreating her, and used such words as "stingy",
"adultery", "brute", "cruelty"summing
it up in one big scene in which she claimed John threatened
her with a gun." Out of necessity and wanting to economize,
they had moved in with John Mac Leod's sister, the two women
had not gotten along in the past and before long the situation
again became unbearable. Shortly after taking an apartment
of their own the marriage collapsed. Margaretha came home
one afternoon and found the apartment empty. John had left
and taken their four-and-a-half year old daughter Non, with
him. Following a brief reconciliation, and exhausted from
squabbling over child custody, Margaretha went back to live
with her Uncle Taconis in the Hague. John MacLeod was an unloving
husband but a loving father and he never gave his daughter
up again. How could Margaretha fight him? She had no money
and no means of support. In light of this harsh reality, she
again turned to the world of her fantasy, Paris. There was
nothing to keep her in Holland.
Margaretha Mac Leod arrived in
France hopeful, romantic, confused, and penniless. She registered
in a hotel in a poor section of the city of Paris which was
frequented by artists. Someone suggested she work as a model.
Reluctant at first, her sense of the theatrical and her desperation
to survive gave her the courage to apply. She wanted to pose
for head drawings alone but was told that such requests were
rare. What was in demand were paintings and novelty photographs
of nudes. She was shocked at first but soon realized that
her only alternative was to go back to Holland. Return to
what? There was no going back! She disrobed for the painter,
Jean Guillaumet who thought she was pretty and had a good
body except for her breasts which, after two children and
breast-feeding, were somewhat pendulous. Since she was strikingly
beautiful and statuesque, he devised a costume which bared
all except her bosom. Several fables, a few of them perpetuated
by Mata Hari herself, described her as the victim of a jealous
husband who sought to disfigure her by biting off one of her
nipples. In French bars the word was that she covered her
breasts because they looked like tobacco pouches. Later on
her prison doctor Leon Brizard in his own book "Souveniers
D'un Medicin" said, "The truth was much more simple:
Mata Hari had small breasts with highly discolored overdeveloped
nipples, and she was not interested at all to show them. As
if to support this theory, her trademark in every photograph
was her bejeweled bra, her constant companion in the dance.
Since her beauty was all that she
had to capitalize on. Margaretha was determined to make the
most of it. But what to do? She had no one to help her. Her
modeling was barely paying the bills. She tried performing
in horse shows, a skill she had acquired from childhood, but
the future looked bleak until an M. Molier suggested that
with a body like hers, she might have more success with dancing
than with horses. Dancing? She did not consider herself a
dancer, yet she felt a challenge, a daring to be creative,
innovative, and yes, a little bit shocking. With the Parisians
in a pleasure of seeking a new mood she began to find herself
in the center of a new world. Margaretha made her debut as
an Oriental dancer at the salon of Mme. Kireevsky, a singer
who was active in Paris society. Her success was instantaneous.
It was at this performance that M. Guimet, a wealthy industrialist
and collector of oriental art, proposed to present her in
a lavish production in his private museum. This was to become
the turning point in her life, the point at which she would
leave behind the dreary past as Margaretha Mac Leod, and take
on the life of the exotic mysterious Mata Hari. When M. Guimet
suggested that she change her name she was ready, since she
had used the name Mata Hari when she danced for the officers
club in Java.
Mata Hari was supposed to be a
dancer from India. Yet, when she danced she discarded her
costume, piece by piece, until she was left wearing only her
jeweled bra, armbands, and headpiece. Years later she would
confide to the Dutch painter Piet Van Der Hem, "I never
could dance well, people came to see me because I was the
first who dared to show myself naked to the public.
The uninhibitedness she had acquired
from posing as a nude model, taking off her clothes for artists
and photographers, led quite easily to her dancing in a state
of near nudity like the statues and paintings of the holy
asparas in the Hindu scriptures. Mata Hari dared to disrobe
in an era when women were corseted and covered from head to
toe. As innocent a display as female ankles was considered
erotic and provocative. To disrobe in public was unheard of.
The public was fascinated. She acquired the admiration of
the most famous people among Paris society and was now making
money, lots of money. She also had scores of wealthy and famous
admirers, many of whom became her lovers. Mata Hari was aware
of the eroticism of her dances and her critics were fascinated
by her daring. Yet she was not a simple vaudeville dancer
to be dismissed after the dance. Hers was an upper class upbringing
and, after her performance, she could easily mingle with the
guests since she had the knowledge of how to behave in highly
civilized society. She capitalized on her past, exaggerating
it somewhat by asserting that she was related to royalty in
the distant past and calling herself Lady Mac Leod. Mata Hari
had an innate knowledge of the importance of publicity. A
reporter described what her observed in her dance, embellishing
her descent and dance origins, she took their fantasies and
added myth to whatever stories they had concocted, never telling
the same story twice. She dwelled on sensuous descriptions
of secret religious rituals which she had supposedly participated
in as a temple dancer. Her admirers multiplied as her fame
began to spread. Several articles began appearing about "Lady"
Mac Leod in the Dutch press.
At first Mata Hari appeared at
soirees and private parties exclusively, dancing for an upper
class, usually intimate and very select audience. Very soon
she aspired to greater things, taking the advice of Maitre
Clunet, who introduced her to the great impresario Gabriel
Astruc. Her first greater public appearance was at the Olympia
Theater on the Boulevard Des Capucines. She was to be the
star attraction, presented amidst the best-known international
variety acts.
Among them were Fred Karno, the
great mime and mentor to the future genius, Charlie Chaplin,
a juggler, "Leo and his infernal violin", some acrobats,
and Arabian dancers. Mata Hari may have picked up some technique
from these performers. For her first appearance, she was paid
the enormous salary of ten thousand francs.
The audience was astounded. The
press was ecstatic. In "Le Journal", one of the
most influential morning papers, the review enthusiastically
described, "Mata Hari personifies all the poetry of India,
its mysticism, its voluptuousness, its languor, its hypnotizing
charm. To see Mata Hari in a rhythm and with attitudes that
are poems of wild voluptuous grace is an unforgettable spectacle.
A really paradise-like dream."
Following the success at the Olympia
Theater, Gabriel Astruc secured contracts for Mata Hari in
Spain and Monte Carlo where she danced to the music of Massenet
in the opera "Le Roi De Lahore." Puccini, who was
in the audience, was completely won over by her.
It was the year 1906. While achieving
triumph after triumph, the much sought after dancer became
the mistress of a wealthy German landowner, Herr Kiepert.
It was an alliance which retired her from the stage for almost
a year during which time she was installed in an apartment
in West Berlin. This was one of the many friendships which
were to contribute to her downfall when she was accused of
being a spy.
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