"I love Paris in the summer, when it sizzles"
About this Quote
Porter’s line doesn’t swoon; it smirks. “I love Paris in the summer, when it sizzles” is a postcard that’s been left a little too close to the stove, and that’s the point. Paris is already a cliche in American pop imagination: romance, art, effortless elegance. Porter tweaks the fantasy by choosing “sizzles,” a word that carries heat, spectacle, and a faint suggestion of overcooking. It’s both sensual and comic, the kind of diction that turns a travel brochure into a raised eyebrow.
The intent is musical as much as lyrical. “Sizzles” is percussive; you can hear the consonants snapping like a cymbal hit. Porter, the master of urbane pleasure, treats desire as something choreographed: heat is an effect you can cue, like lighting on a stage. Subtext: the speaker isn’t merely in love with Paris; he’s in love with the idea of Paris as a performance, an atmosphere that makes ordinary life feel charged. Summer “sizzles” suggests bodies, nightlife, flirtation - but also crowded streets and sweat, the messy reality that romances usually edit out. Porter keeps it in, because the mess is part of the thrill.
Context matters: Porter wrote for audiences hungry for sophistication and escape, especially in the interwar and wartime years when “Paris” functioned as shorthand for freedom and style. His genius is refusing earnestness. He gives you glamour and winks while handing it over, reminding you that longing is most convincing when it knows it’s a little ridiculous.
The intent is musical as much as lyrical. “Sizzles” is percussive; you can hear the consonants snapping like a cymbal hit. Porter, the master of urbane pleasure, treats desire as something choreographed: heat is an effect you can cue, like lighting on a stage. Subtext: the speaker isn’t merely in love with Paris; he’s in love with the idea of Paris as a performance, an atmosphere that makes ordinary life feel charged. Summer “sizzles” suggests bodies, nightlife, flirtation - but also crowded streets and sweat, the messy reality that romances usually edit out. Porter keeps it in, because the mess is part of the thrill.
Context matters: Porter wrote for audiences hungry for sophistication and escape, especially in the interwar and wartime years when “Paris” functioned as shorthand for freedom and style. His genius is refusing earnestness. He gives you glamour and winks while handing it over, reminding you that longing is most convincing when it knows it’s a little ridiculous.
Quote Details
| Topic | Travel |
|---|---|
| Source | Song: "I Love Paris" by Cole Porter (from the 1953 musical Can-Can) — lyric line: "I love Paris in the summer when it sizzles." |
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