Suzanne Muzard

[7] After meeting her during a visit to the brothel, the writer Emmanuel Berl fell in love with Muzard[8] and in 1926 he set her up in an apartment.

At the beginning of November 1927, at the Café Cyrano, the rendezvous of the surrealists,[9] Berl introduced Muzard to Andre Breton.

[10] Breton and Muzard decided to leave Paris and spend a fortnight in the south of France, although she did not want to separate from Berl.

Muzard wrote, under her married name of Cordonnier, an autobiographical essay entitled La passagère insoumise (The Rebellious Wanderer) in 1974.

[18] Her unfinished memoirs were published in 2004 by Georges Sebbag in André Breton, l'amour-folie: Suzanne, Nadja, Lise, Simone, a book on surrealist women.