Dieux du Stade

Dieux du Stade (transl. 'Gods of the Stadium', stylized as Dievx Dv Stade) is a nude calendar produced by Stade Français, a French professional rugby union club based in Paris. Conceived by club president Max Guazzini as a marketing initiative to promote the club and shift the image of rugby, the calendar features nude and semi-nude photography of the club's members and other sportsmen, occasionally in a homoerotic context. The calendar was first published in 2001, and most recently in 2020. At its peak, Dieux du Stade sold approximately 180,000 copies annually, and by 2019 had sold approximately 1.6  million copies in total.

2001 edition cover, photographed by Kris Gautier and featuring Mike James

History

Dieux du Stade was conceived by Max Guazzini, who served as president of Stade Français from 1992 to 2011. A former president of the NRJ Group, Dieux du Stade was one of several marketing initiatives by Guazzini aimed at promoting the club and changing the image of rugby as a sport; other tactics included introducing pink uniforms for Stade Français, and recruiting Madonna and Naomi Campbell to be official sponsors for the club.[1]

The first Dieux du Stade was released for the 2001 calendar year.[2] It features nude and semi-nude photographs of Stade Français' players, occasionally in homoerotic scenarios,[3] though later editions of the calendar expanded beyond Stade Français to feature male athletes from other clubs and sports.[4][5] The photographer for each edition of Dieux du Stade varies; individuals who have shot the calendar include Steven Klein, Peter Lindbergh, Tony Duran, and François Rousseau.[6][7] Photographs included in Dieux du Stade have also been published as coffee table books.[2]

Dieux du Stade expanded significantly in popularity in 2004 with the release of Dieux du Stade: Le making of du calendrier 2004, a DVD featuring documentary-style behind-the-scenes footage of that year's photoshoot; similar DVDs would be released for subsequent editions of the calendar.[3] At its peak Dieux du Stade sold approximately 180,000 copies per year,[1] and earned up to €2.3 million annually for Stade Français.[3] By 2019, an estimated 1.6 million copies of Dieux du Stade calendars had been sold.[3] A portion of the profits for some editions of the calendar were donated to charity, while Stade Français received approximately 50 percent of the calendar's sale price (€29 in 2019).[1] According to Guazzini, sales from Dieux du Stade "helped finance the club for many years".[1]

The calendar has occasionally attracted criticism and controversy. Racing 92 attempted to have photographs of player Henry Chavancy removed from the 2012 edition of the calendar days before it was slated to be released, calling it a "slight on Racing's image" and claiming that Chavancy had not sought permission to participate from club management; the calendar was ultimately published without redactions.[8][9] A frontal nude image of mixed martial arts fighter Sylvain Potard in the 2016 edition of the calendar received significant media attention in France due to the large size of Potard's genitals.[3][10]

By 2019, annual sales for Dieux du Stade had fallen to 50,000 copies, a trend Libération attributed to a general decline in the popularity of physical calendars amid increasing digitization.[1] Vanity Fair France speculated that the calendar's shift in the mid- to late 2010s towards glossy high fashion-styled photography also contributed to a decline in popularity, a trend the 2020 edition of the calendar attempted to reverse by incorporating a more naturalistic aesthetic.[3] The most recent edition of the calendar was released for the 2020 calendar year; the 2021 edition was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and no subsequent editions have been produced.[11]

List of editions

Selected Dieux du Stade cover models. Top row: Mirco Bergamasco (2004), Sergio Parisse (2009 and 2016), Dimitri Szarzewski (2011). Bottom row: Scott LaValla (2013), Alexandre Flanquart (2014), Maxime Mermoz (2018)
YearPhotographerCover modelRef.
2001Kris Gautier Mike James[12]
2002 Thomas Lombard[13]
2003Mathias Vriens Ignacio Corleto[14]
2004François Rousseau Mirco Bergamasco[15]
2005Carter Smith Olivier Sarraméa[16]
2006Fred Goudon Juan Martín Hernández[17]
2007Mariano Vivanco Julien Arias[18]
2008Steven Klein Geoffroy Messina[19]
2009Peter Lindbergh Sergio Parisse[20]
2010Tony Duran James Haskell[21]
2011François Rousseau Dimitri Szarzewski[22]
2012 Sébastien Torresin [fr][23]
2013 Scott LaValla[24]
2014Fred Goudon Alexandre Flanquart[25]
2015 Morgan Parra[26]
2016 Sergio Parisse[20]
2017Errikos Andreou Terry Bouhraoua[27]
2018 Maxime Mermoz[28]
2019Ludovic Baron Clément Daguin [fr][29]
2020Pierre-Ange Carlotti Jules Plisson[30]

See also

References