Did you know the Princess Grace Irish Library has a rare first edition of James Joyce’s Ulysses? The copy is numbered 312 out of 1,000 printed on handmade paper dated February 2, 1922. It was published in Paris by the English-language bookshop Shakespeare and Company, owned by American ex-pat Sylvia Beach, who had met Joyce at a party in Paris.
The classic is set on a single day June 16, 1904, and, since 1954, a Bloomsday festival – named after the central character, Leopold Bloom – takes place on this day. Loyal fans dress up in Edwardian costumes and celebrate in the streets of the author’s native Dublin, as well as in cities worldwide.
WATCH VIDEO ABOVE: Bloomsday in Monaco 2022.
Bloomsday in Monaco is organised by the Princess Grace Irish Library (9 Rue Princesse Marie de Lorraine) in partnership with the Monaco-Ireland Arts Society and a group of talented actors.
“This is our fourth year to celebrate Bloomsday in Monaco with actors from the Monaco-Ireland Arts Society,” says library director Paula Farquharson. “What was born out of necessity, due to Covid restrictions, has morphed into an annual celebration of Ireland’s most famous writer. Although not one of Ireland’s four Nobel prize winners, Joyce has inspired and intrigued the literary scene and the greater public who embrace this day across the globe.”
The kick off is at 2:15 pm inside the library (first floor), where this year there’s a special display of James Joyce memorabilia, on loan from the private collection of Michael Flatley, award-winning dancer and producer of Riverdance and Lord of the Dance.
Around 2:45 pm Bloomsday revellers leave the library to stroll around Monaco-Ville just as the author’s fictional character, Bloom, did when he wandered Dublin city on June 16, 1904. First stop is beside the Prince’s Palace (by the tourist bus stop).
The literary event is free – just turn up wearing a hat. “We’re delighted to frolic about in Monaco-Ville with dramatic readings and the odd obscenity exclaimed from James Joyce’s masterpiece Ulysses,” enthuses Paula.
“We’re grateful to Prince Albert for allowing us to perform passages from the book on the Palace Square – we chose morally decent parts! Much to the delight of tourists who question, ‘What’s going on? Why the Irish flag?’”
The Princess Grace Irish Library at 9 rue Princesse Marie-de-Lorraine is free to visit. Open Monday to Thursday 9 am to 5 pm (last guided visit at 4:30 pm) and Friday 9 am to 4 pm (last guided visit 3:30 pm). Email for general enquiries and reservations.
Article first published June 14, 2024. Feature photo courtesy of the Princess Grace Irish Library.
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