When Leonardo DiCaprio, the star of the latest big screen adaptation of The Great Gatsby, arrives at the Cannes Film Festival this week, he will be following in the footsteps of author F. Scott Fitzgerald.
The Jazz Age writer spent a number of years in France including a spell on the Cote d'Azur where he led a gilded life surrounded by other luminaries such as artist Pablo Picasso and fellow writer Ernest Hemingway.
The American composer and songwriter Cole Porter popularised the Cap d'Antibes by renting a house there during the summers of 1921 and 1922. The area was then almost totally undiscovered, but all that changed with the arrival of a young American couple, Gerald and Sara Murphy, and their children, who were among those to stay with Porter.
Before the couple's arrival, the fashionable and well-heeled tended to spend only the winter on the Cote d'Azur before heading north in April.
But in 1923 the couple persuaded the Hotel du Cap to keep its doors open during the summer months, transforming the area into a year-round playground for literary and artistic types.