Welcome my guest blogger, author Steven P. Unger as he blogs about a vampire’s
guide to New Orleans.
I wrote
this article on New Orleans as an homage to one of my favorite cities, one
still fresh in my mind and heart after a long-postponed revisit there as an
invitee to the Vampire Film Festival's Midsummer Nightmare last year.
All of
the photos in this article are my own, except for the portrait of the Compte de
St. Germain and the two pictures otherwise credited. Most of the text is a compendium of others'
words and research. With apologies to anyone
I may have inadvertently left out, my online research for this chapter led me
to articles from hubpages.com; Kalila K. Smith (whose Vampire Tour I can
recommend from personal experience—see http://www.zoominfo.com/p/Kalila-Smith/178024410);
New Orleans Ghosts.com; GO NOLA; Brian Harrison; Haunted Shreveport
Bossier.com; and Frommers.com. I've
borrowed freely from all of these sources and recommend them highly to those
who would like to delve more deeply into the secrets of this unique city.
If you have ever walked the
dark, rainy streets of the French Quarter at night, you have seen the voodoo
shops selling their gris-gris and John-the-Conqueror Root. You've seen the old woman in the French
Market whose pointing finger foretells your death And if you know the right person to ask and
you ask in the right way, you'll be shown to the vampire clubs.
I've been in those clubs and
seen people who believe with their heart, body, and soul that they are real,
live vampires. And some of the people in
those clubs are scared to death of a select group of vampires who have only
appeared there a few times, and always in the darkest of night.
By day, of course, the
vampire clubs are closed and locked or turned back into regular tourist bars .
. .
--Crazy Horse's Ghost
Like the Spanish Moss
that drapes the trees of the nearby bayous, mystery and the occult have
shrouded New Orleans
since its birth. For hundreds of years,
families there have practiced a custom called "sitting up with the
dead." When a family member dies, a
relative or close family friend stays with the body until it is placed into one
of New Orleans'
above-ground tombs or is buried. The
body is never left unattended.
There are many reasons
given for this practice today—the Old Families will tell you it's simply
respect for the dead—but this tradition actually dates back to the vampire
folklore of medieval Eastern Europe.
First, the mirrors are covered and the clocks are stopped. While sitting up with the deceased, the
friend or family member is really watching for signs of paranormal activity,
e.g.,. if a cat is seen to jump over, walk across, or stand on top of the
coffin; if a dog barks or growls at the coffin; or if a horse shies from it,
these are all signs of impending vampirism.
Likewise, if a shadow falls over the corpse. At that point, steps are taken to prevent the
corpse from returning from the dead.
Ways to stop a corpse—especially a suicide—from
becoming a vampire include burying it face down at a crossroads. Often family members place a sickle around
the neck to keep the corpse from sitting up; stuff the mouth with garlic and
sew it closed; or mutilate the body, usually by decapitating the head and
placing it at the bottom of the feet. But
the most common remedy for impending vampirism is to drive a stake into the
corpse, decapitate it, then burn the body to ashes. This method is still believed to be the only
sure way to truly destroy the undead.
THE CASKET GIRLS
Ask any
member of the Old Families who the first vampires to come to New Orleans were, and they'll tell you the
same: it was the Casket Girls.
Much of the population that found their
way to New Orleans
in the early 1700s were unwelcome anywhere else: deported galley slaves and felons, trappers,
gold-hunters and petty criminals. People
who wouldn't be noticed if they went missing.
Sources
vary on the specifics, but the basic story is that the city’s founders asked
French officials to send over prospective wives for the colonists. They obliged and after months at sea these
young girls showed up on the docks, pale and gaunt, bearing only as many
belongings as would fit inside a wooden chest or "casquette," which
appears to have been the 18th Century equivalent of an overnight
bag. They were taken to the Ursuline Convent, which still stands today, where the girls
were said to have resided until the nuns could arrange for marriages.
Some
accounts say they were fine young women, virgins brought up in church-run
orphanages; some say they were prostitutes.
But there are many who swear they were vampires, vampires who continue
to rise from their "casquettes" on the third floor to break through
the windows and hurricane shutters—windows and shutters that always seem to
need repairing after the calmest of nights—to feed upon the transient crowds
that for centuries have filled the darkened alleys of the Quarter.
Finally in 1978, after centuries of rumors and stories, two amateur reporters demanded to see these
coffins. The archbishop, of course,
denied them entrance. Undaunted, the
next night the two men climbed over the convent wall with their recording
equipment and set up their workstation below.
The next morning, the reporters' equipment was found strewn about the
lawn. And on the front porch steps of
the convent were found the almost decapitated bodies of these two men. Eighty percent of their blood was gone. To this day, no one has ever solved the
murders.
LE COMPTE DE
ST.
GERMAIN
If there is one person who encapsulates the lure and the
danger of the vampire, it is the Compte de Saint Germain. Making his first appearance in the court of
Louis XV of France,
the Comte de Saint Germain endeared himself to the aristocrats by regaling them
with events from his past. An alchemist
by trade, he claimed to be in possession of the "elixir of life," and
to be more than 6,000 years old.
At other times the Count at claimed to be a
son of Francis II Rakoczi, the Prince of Transylvania, born in 1712, possibly
legitimate, possibly by Duchess Violante Beatrice of Bavaria. This would account for his wealth and fine
education. It also explains why kings
would accept him as one of their own.
Contemporary accounts from the time record that despite
being in the midst of many banquets and invited to the finest homes, he never
ate at any of them. He would, however,
sip at a glass of red wine. After a few
years, he left the French court and moved to Germany, where he was reported to
have died. However, people continued to spot him throughout Europe
even after his death.
In 1903, a handsome and charismatic young Frenchman named
Jacques Saint Germain, claiming to be a descendant of the Compte, arrived in
New Orleans, taking residence in a house at the corner of Royal and Ursuline
streets. Possessing an eye for beauty, Jacques was seen on the streets of the
French Quarter with a different young woman on his arm every evening. His excursions came to an abrupt end one cold
December night, when a woman’s piercing scream was heard coming from Jacques’
French Quarter home. The scream was
quickly followed by a woman who flung herself from the second story window to
land on the street below. As bystanders
rushed to her aid, she told them how Saint Germain attacked and bit her, and
that she jumped out of the window to escape.
She died later that evening at Charity
Hospital in New Orleans.
By the
time the New Orleans
police kicked in the door of Saint Germain’s home, he had escaped. However, what they did find was disturbing
enough. The stench of death greeted the
nostrils of the policemen, who found not only large bloodstains in the wooden
flooring, but even wine bottles filled with human blood. The house was declared a crime scene and sealed
off. From that evil night to the present
day, no one has lived in that home in the French Quarter. It is private property and all taxes have
been paid to date, but no one has been able to contact the present owner or
owners. The only barriers between the
valuable French Quarter property and the outside world are the boarded-up
balcony windows and a small lock on the door.
Whispers of Jacques sightings are prevalent, and people still report
seeing him in the French Quarter. Could
it be the enigmatic Compte checking up on his property?
ANNE RICE AND THE VAMPIRE CHRONICLES
There is
no one who has done more to bring the vampire into the New Age than Anne Rice,
born and bred in New Orleans, with her novel Interview with the Vampire and the films and books that
followed. Those who have profited
mightily from the popularity of True
Blood and Twilight owe her a
great debt.
The
ultra-retro St. Charles Avenue Streetcar will take you close to Lafayette
Cemetery No. 1, the gravesite of Louis de Pointe du Lac's (Lestat's companion
and fellow vampire in Rice's The Vampire
Chronicles) wife and child and where Louis was turned into a vampire by
Lestat.
The
Styrofoam tomb from the film Interview
with the Vampire is gone now, but you can easily find the site where it
stood, the wide empty space in the cemetery nearest the corner of Coliseum and Sixth Street.
During
the filming of Interview with the Vampire,
the blocks between 700 and 900 Royal Street in the French Quarter were used for
exterior shots of the home of the vampires Louis, Lestat, and Claudia,
trapped through time with an adult mind
in the body of a six-year-old girl. In
fact, the streets there and around Jackson
Square were covered in mud for the movie as they
had been in the 1860s when the scenes took place.
The
perfectly preserved Gallier House at 1132
Royal Street was Anne Rice's inspiration for the
vampires' house, and very close to that is the Lalaurie House, at 1140 Royal Street. Delphine Lalaurie, portrayed by Kathy Bates
in American Horror Story: Coven, was a real person who lived in
that house and was indeed said to have tortured and bathed in the blood of her
slaves—even the blood of a slave girl's newborn baby—to preserve her
youth. She was never seen again in New Orleans after an
angry mob partially destroyed her home on April 10, 1834. There is a scene in American Horror Story where Delphine escapes from the coven's
mansion and sits dejectedly on the curb in front of her old home. A private residence now, some locals still
swear that the Lalaurie House is haunted, and that the clanking of chains can
be heard through the night.
Built in
1789, Madame John's Legacy (632
Dumaine Street) is the oldest surviving residence
in the Mississippi
Valley. In Interview
with the Vampire, caskets are shown being carried out of the house as
Louis' (Brad Pitt) voice-over describes the handiwork of his housemates Claudia
and Lestat: "An infant prodigy with
a lust for killing that matched his own.
Together, they finished off whole families."
SOURCES FOR VAMPIRES
As a
service to this most vampire-friendly city (http://www.vampirewebsite.net/vampirefriendlycities.html),
the New Orleans Vampire Association describes
itself as a "non-profit organization comprised of self-identifying
vampires representing an alliance between Houses within the Community in the
Greater New Orleans
Area. Founded in 2005, NOVA was
established to provide support and structure for the vampire and other-kin
subcultures and to provide educational and charitable outreach to those in
need."
Their Web
site also points out that "every year since Hurricane Katrina, the
founding members of NOVA have taken food out on Easter, Thanksgiving, and
Christmas to those who are hungry and homeless." (See http://www.neworleansvampireassociation.org/index.html)
FANGTASIA,
named with permission from HBO after the club featured in True Blood, is an affiliation of New Orleans-based musicians and
film and TV producers who for three years have presented a multi-day
vampire-centric event of the same name, the first two years at 1135 Decatur and
last year at the Howlin' Wolf. You can
follow their plans and exploits via their blog at http://www.fangtasiaevent.com/fangtasia-blog/.
Next year
FANGTASIA hopes to create "the South by Southwest of Global Vampire
Culture" at an as yet undisclosed location in Greater New Orleans.
As they describe it:
Moving beyond this third
consecutive year, FANGTASIA is building a broader international draw that will
bring fans to not only party at club nights, but also attend conferences,
elegant fashion shows, film & TV screenings, celebrity events as well as
an international Halloween/party gear
buyers’ market.
Participants will experience
gourmet sensations, explore our sensuous city and haunted bayous… as well as
epically celebrate the Global Vampire Culture in all its sultry, seductive,
diverse and darkly divine incarnations.
Additionally, FANGTASIA is strategically poised months prior to
Halloween to provide corporate sponsors and vendors a perfect window to connect
with their core demographic. This also
allows FANGTASIA to actively support and promote existing major Halloween
events in New Orleans
and beyond.
On the
subject of vampiric Halloween events, for 25 years the Anne Rice Vampire Lestat
Fan Club (http://arvlfc.com/index.html)
has presented the annual Vampire Ball (http://arvlfc.com/ball.html),
now as part of the four-day UndeadCon (http://arvlfc.com/undeadcon.html)
at the end of October; and on the
weekend nearest Halloween Night (for example, November 1, 2014) the Endless
Night Festival and New Orleans Vampire Ball takes place at the House of Blues (http://www.endlessnight.com/venue/).
The
Boutique du Vampyre (http://feelthebite.com/boutique2013.html)
is a moveable (literally—they're known to change locations on short notice)
feast of vampire and Goth-related odds and ends, many of them locally
made. There are books as well—you may
even find a copy of In the Footsteps of
Dracula: A Personal Journey and Travel
Guide if they're not sold out. Their
Web site itself holds a surprise treat:
a link to a free video cast of the first two seasons of Vampire Mob (http://vampiremob.com/Vampire_Mob/Vampire_Mob.html),
which is just what the title implies.
Finally,
no visit to the Crescent
City would be complete,
for Vampire and Mortal alike, without a taste of absinthe (http://www.piratesalleycafe.com/absinthe.html),
or even more than a taste. There is a
ritual to the preparation and serving of absinthe that should not be missed;
one of the sites that does this authentically is the Pirates Alley Café and
Absinthe House at 622 Pirates Alley.
***
About
Steven P. Unger:
Steven P.
Unger is the best-selling author of In
the Footsteps of Dracula: A Personal
Journey and Travel Guide, published and distributed by World Audience
Publishers.
In the Footsteps of Dracula can be
ordered from your local bookstore or online at Print on Amazon,
www.amazon.co.uk, http://www.barnesandnoble.com, www.amazon.fr, www.amazon.de,
KINDLE, or with free
delivery worldwide from http://www.bookdepository.co.uk.
1 comment:
Merci for an informative article. I knew already about the "casket girls"and the absinthe ritual, but not some some of the other facts. I'll keep them in mind for my next vampire novel.
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