A chanteuse is a nightclub entertainer - a woman - that sings
slow ballads or torch songs.
When Elma asked her what she did for a living, she didn’t say she was a singer or a nightclub performer. She said, “ I'm a chanteuse. I call m'self Cherie.” I doubt she spoke more than a few words of French, but here she uses two in one sentence. It’s clear, Cherie has lived a hard life. By referring to herself as a “chanteuse,” she seems to lift herself up a little bit. She feels a sense of sophistication.
It’s not lost on me that the person most
responsible for bringing Bus Stop to the big screen is Marilyn
Monroe. Like Cherie, Marilyn was a dreamer. From an early age, when
she was separated from her mentally ill mother, she lived her life bouncing
between orphanages and foster families. She grew up lonely and
vulnerable. It was the movies that gave her hope. She identified
with the glamorous stars on the screen. Cherie was a second-rate cabaret from
the Ozarks, who saw herself as a chanteuse. For her, the word has a ring
of class. Before Marilyn began shooting Bus Stop, she enrolled in
The Actors Studio in New York. She had little reason to – she was already
one of the biggest movie stars in the world. But Marilyn had greater
ambitions than that. She wanted to be known and respected as a
world-class “artist.” This brings me back to my definition. Singers
sing. A “chanteuse” is a woman people listen to. She has a story to tell.