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Theatre of France

An overview of the theatre of France.

Historic overview edit

Secular French theatre edit

Discussions about the origins of non-religious theatre ("théâtre profane") -- both drama and farce—in the Middle Ages remain controversial, but the idea of a continuous popular tradition stemming from Latin comedy and tragedy to the 9th century seems unlikely.

Most historians place the origin of medieval drama in the church's liturgical dialogues and "tropes". At first simply dramatizations of the ritual, particularly in those rituals connected with Christmas and Easter (see Mystery play), plays were eventually transferred from the monastery church to the chapter house or refectory hall and finally to the open air, and the vernacular was substituted for Latin. In the 12th century one finds the earliest extant passages in French appearing as refrains inserted into liturgical dramas in Latin, such as a Saint Nicholas (patron saint of the student clercs) play and a Saint Stephen play.

Dramatic plays in French from the 12th and 13th centuries:

  • Le Jeu d'Adam (1150–1160) - written in octosyllabic rhymed couplets with Latin stage directions (implying that it was written by Latin-speaking clerics for a lay public)
  • Le Jeu de Saint Nicolas - Jean Bodel - written in octosyllabic rhymed couplets
  • Le Miracle de Théophile - Rutebeuf (c.1265)

The origins of farce and comic theatre remain equally controversial; some −literary historians believe in a non-liturgical origin (among "jongleurs" or in pagan and folk festivals), others see the influence of liturgical drama (some of the dramas listed above include farcical sequences) and monastic readings of Plautus and Latin comic theatre.

Non-dramatic plays from the 12th and 13th centuries:

Select list of plays from the 14th and 15th centuries:

  • La Farce de maître Trubert et d'Antrongnard - Eustache Deschamps
  • Le Dit des quatre offices de l'ostel du roy - Eustache Deschamps
  • Miracles de Notre Dame
  • Bien Avisé et mal avisé (morality) (1439)
  • La Farce de maître Pierre Pathelin (1464–1469) - this play had a great influence on Rabelais in the 16th century
  • Le Franc archer de Bagnolet (1468–1473)
  • Moralité (1486) - Henri Baude
  • L'Homme pécheur (morality) (1494)
  • La Farce du cuvier
  • La Farce nouvelle du pâté et de la tarte

In the 15th century, the public representation of plays was organized and controlled by a number of professional and semi-professional guilds:

Genres of theatre practiced in the Middle Ages in France:

  • Farce - a realistic, humorous, and even coarse satire of human failings
  • Sottie - generally a conversation among idiots ("sots"), full of puns and quidproquos
  • Pastourelle - a play with a pastoral setting
  • Chantefable - a mixed verse and prose form only found in "Aucassin et Nicolette"
  • Mystery play - a depiction of the Christian mysteries or Saint's lives
  • Morality play
  • Miracle play
  • Passion play
  • Sermon Joyeux - a burlesque sermon

Renaissance theatre edit

16th-century French theatre followed the same patterns of evolution as the other literary genres of the period. For the first decades of the century, public theatre remained largely tied to its long medieval heritage of mystery plays, morality plays, farces, and soties, although the miracle play was no longer in vogue. Public performances were tightly controlled by a guild system. The guild "les Confrères de la Passion" had exclusive rights to theatrical productions of mystery plays in Paris; in 1548, fear of violence or blasphemy resulting from the growing religious rift in France forced the Paris Parliament to prohibit performances of the mysteries in the capital, although they continued to be performed in other places. Another guild, the "Enfants Sans-Souci" was in charge of farces and soties, as too the "Clercs de la Basoche" who also performed morality plays. Like the "Confrères de la Passion", "la Basoche" came under political scrutiny (plays had to be authorized by a review board; masks or characters depicting living persons were not permitted), and they were finally suppressed in 1582. By the end of the century, only the "Confrères de la Passion" remained with exclusive control over public theatrical productions in Paris, and they rented out their theatre at the Hôtel de Bourgogne to theatrical troupes for a high price. In 1597,[1] they abandoned this privilege.

Alongside the numerous writers of these traditional works (such as the farce writers Pierre Gringore, Nicolas de La Chesnaye and André de la Vigne), Marguerite de Navarre also wrote a number of plays close to the traditional mystery and morality play.

As early as 1503 however, original language versions of Sophocles, Seneca, Euripides, Aristophanes, Terence and Plautus were all available in Europe and the next forty years would see humanists and poets both translating these classics and adapting them. In the 1540s, the French university setting (and especially — from 1553 on — the Jesuit colleges) became host to a Neo-Latin theatre (in Latin) written by professors such as George Buchanan and Marc Antoine Muret which would leave a profound mark on the members of La Pléiade. From 1550 on, one finds humanist theatre written in French. Prominent figures such as Catherine de' Medici provided financial support for many humanist plays; in 1554, for example, she commissioned a translation of Gian Giorgio Trissino’s La Sofonisba, which was the first tragedy to appear in the French language.[2]

The influence of Seneca was particularly strong in humanist tragedy. His plays — which were essentially chamber plays meant to be read for their lyrical passages and rhetorical oratory — brought to many humanist tragedies a concentration on rhetoric and language over dramatic action.

Humanist tragedy took two distinct directions:

  • Biblical tragedy: plots taken from the bible — although close in inspiration to the medieval mystery plays, the humanist biblical tragedy reconceived the biblical characters along classical lines, suppressing both comic elements and the presence of God on the stage. The plots often had clear parallels to contemporary political and religious matters and one finds both Protestant and Catholic playwrights.
  • Ancient tragedy: plots taken from mythology or history — they often had clear parallels to contemporary political and religious matters

During the height of the civil wars (1570–1580), a third category of militant theatre appeared: During the height of the civil wars (1570–1580), a third category of militant theatre emerged, adding to the existing genres of ancient tragedy and comedy. This new form of theater was characterized by its explicit political and religious themes, mirroring the turbulent contemporary context of the time. This article aims to explore and expand upon the development and significance of this militant theatre during the period of civil wars.

Militant theatre of the time was heavily influenced by the prevailing political and religious tensions. Plots were often drawn from mythology or history, presenting narratives that had clear parallels to contemporary political events and religious conflicts. This allowed audiences to connect with the performances on a personal and ideological level.

The plays performed in this category of theater often served as vehicles for political commentary and social critique. They explored themes such as power struggles, the abuse of authority, corruption, religious persecution, and the consequences of war. Through vivid and provocative storytelling, these plays sought to engage and incite audiences, encouraging them to reflect upon the turbulent times in which they lived.

One notable aspect of militant theater was its use of allegory and symbolism. Playwrights employed metaphors and allegorical characters to represent political figures, religious factions, or ideological movements. This veiled approach allowed them to address sensitive topics while avoiding direct censorship or retribution.

The actors and playwrights involved in militant theater faced considerable risks due to the politically charged nature of their work. Censorship, surveillance, and even imprisonment were constant threats. Nevertheless, the appeal and impact of these performances attracted audiences who sought catharsis, validation, and a deeper understanding of the socio-political climate.

While militant theatre during the civil wars was a product of its time, its influence extended beyond the immediate historical context. It laid the groundwork for the development of subsequent forms of political and socially conscious theater, leaving a lasting impact on the theatrical landscape.

  • Contemporary tragedy: plots taken from recent events

Along with their work as translators and adaptors of plays, the humanists also investigated classical theories of dramatic structure, plot, and characterization. Horace was translated in the 1540s, but had been available throughout the Middle Ages. A complete version of Aristotle's Poetics appeared later (first in 1570 in an Italian version), but his ideas had circulated (in an extremely truncated form) as early as the 13th century in Hermann the German's Latin translation of Averroes' Arabic gloss, and other translations of the Poetics had appeared in the first half of the 16th century; also of importance were the commentaries on Aristotle's poetics by Julius Caesar Scaliger which appeared in the 1560s. The fourth century grammarians Diomedes and Aelius Donatus were also a source of classical theory. The sixteenth century Italians played a central role in the publishing and interpretation of classical dramatic theory, and their works had a major effect on French theatre. Lodovico Castelvetro's Aristote-based Art of Poetry(1570) was one of the first enunciations of the three unities; this work would inform Jean de la Taille's Art de la tragedie (1572). Italian theatre (like the tragedy of Gian Giorgio Trissino) and debates on decorum (like those provoked by Sperone Speroni's play Canace and Giovanni Battista Giraldi's play Orbecche) would also influence the French tradition.

In the same spirit of imitation — and adaptation — of classical sources that had informed the poetic compositions of La Pléiade, French humanist writers recommended that tragedy should be in five acts and have three main characters of noble rank; the play should begin in the middle of the action (in medias res), use noble language and not show scenes of horror on the stage. Some writers (like Lazare de Baïf and Thomas Sébillet) attempted to link the medieval tradition of morality plays and farces to classical theatre, but Joachim du Bellay rejected this claim and elevated classical tragedy and comedy to a higher dignity. Of greater difficulty for the theorists was the incorporation of Aristotle's notion of "catharsis" or the purgation of emotions with Renaissance theatre, which remained profoundly attached to both pleasing the audience and to the rhetorical aim of showing moral examples (exemplum).

Étienne Jodelle's Cléopâtre captive (1553) — which tells the impassioned fears and doubts of Cleopatra contemplating suicide — has the distinction of being the first original French play to follow Horace's classical precepts on structure (the play is in five acts and respects more or less the unities of time, place and action) and is extremely close to the ancient model: the prologue is introduced by a shade, there is a classical chorus which comments on the action and talks directly to the characters, and the tragic ending is described by a messenger.

Mellin de Saint-Gelais's translation of Gian Giorgio Trissino's La Sophonisbe — the first modern regular tragedy based on ancient models which tells the story of the noble Sophonisba's suicide (rather than be taken as captive by Rome) — was an enormous success at the court when performed in 1556.

Select list of authors and works of humanist tragedy:

(See the playwrights Antoine de Montchrestien, Alexandre Hardy and Jean de Schelandre for tragedy around 1600-1610.)

Alongside tragedy, European humanists also adapted the ancient comedic tradition and as early as the 15th century, Renaissance Italy had developed a form of humanist Latin comedy. Although the ancients had been less theoretical about the comedic form, the humanists used the precepts of Aelius Donatus (4th century AD), Horace, Aristotle and the works of Terence to elaborate a set of rules: comedy should seek to correct vice by showing the truth; there should be a happy ending; comedy uses a lower style of language than tragedy; comedy does not paint the great events of states and leaders, but the private lives of people, and its principle subject is love.

Although some French authors kept close to the ancient models (Pierre de Ronsard translated a part of Aristophanes's "Plutus" at college), on the whole the French comedic tradition shows a great deal of borrowing from all sources: medieval farce (which continued to be immensely popular throughout the century), the short story, Italian humanist comedies and "La Celestina" (by Fernando de Rojas).

Select list of authors and works of Renaissance comedy:

In the last decades of the century, four other theatrical modes from Italy — which did not follow the rigid rules of classical theatre – flooded the French stage:

  • the Commedia dell'arte — an improvisational theatre of fixed types (Harlequin, Colombo) created in Padua in 1545; Italian troupes were invited in France from 1576 on.
  • the Tragicomedy — a theatrical version of the adventurous novel, with lovers, knights, disguises and magic. The most famous of these is Robert Garnier's Bradamante (1580), adapted from Ariosto's Orlando furioso.
  • the Pastoral — modeled on Giambattista Guarini's "Pastor fido" ("Faithful Shepard"), Tasso's "Aminta" and Antonio Ongaro "Alceo" (themselves inspired by Jacopo Sannazaro and Jorge de Montemayor). The first French pastorals were short plays performed before a tragedy, but were eventually expanded into five acts. Nicolas de Montreux wrote three pastorals: Athlette (1585), Diane (1592) Arimène ou le berger désespéré (1597).
  • the Ballets de cour (Court Ballet) — an allegorical and fantastic mixture of dance and theatre. The most famous of these is the "Ballet comique de la reine" (1581).

By the end of the century, the most influential French playwright — by the range of his styles and by his mastery of the new forms — would be Robert Garnier.

All of these eclectic traditions would continue to evolve in the "baroque" theatre of the early 17th century, before French "classicism" would finally impose itself.

Early modern theatres and theatrical companies edit

During the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, public theatrical representations in Paris were under the control of guilds, but in the last decades of the sixteenth century only one of these continued to exist: although "les Confrèrie de la Passion" no longer had the right to perform mystery plays (1548), they were given exclusive rights to oversee all theatrical productions in the capital and rented out their theatre (the Hôtel de Bourgogne) to theatrical troupes at a high price. In 1597, this guild abandoned its privilege which permitted other theatres and theatrical companies to eventually open in the capital.

In addition to public theatres, plays were produced in private residences, before the court and in the university. In the first half of the century, the public, the humanist theatre of the colleges and the theatre performed at court showed extremely divergent tastes. For example, while the tragicomedy was fashionable at the court in the first decade, the public was more interested in tragedy.

The early theatres in Paris were often placed in existing structures like tennis courts; their stages were extremely narrow, and facilities for sets and scene changes were often non-existent (this would encourage the development of the unity of place). Eventually, theatres would develop systems of elaborate machines and decors, fashionable for the chevaleresque flights of knights found in the tragicomedies of the first half of the century.

In the early part of the century, the theatre performances took place twice a week starting at two or three o'clock. Theatrical representations often encompassed several works, beginning with a comic prologue, then a tragedy or tragicomedy, then a farce and finally a song. Nobles sometimes sat on the side of the stage during the performance. Given that it was impossible to lower the house lights, the audience was always aware of each other and spectators were notably vocal during performances. The place directly in front of the stage, without seats—the "parterre"—was reserved for men, but being the cheapest tickets, the parterre was usually a mix of social groups. Elegant people watched the show from the galleries. Princes, musketeers and royal pages were given free entry. Before 1630, an honest woman did not go to the theatre.

Unlike England, France placed no restrictions on women performing on stage, but the career of actors of either sex was seen as morally wrong by the Catholic Church (actors were excommunicated) and by the ascetic religious Jansenist movement. Actors typically had fantastic stage names that described typical roles or stereotypical characters.

In addition to scripted comedies and tragedies, Parisians were also great fans of the Italian acting troupe who performed their Commedia dell'arte, a kind of improvised theatre based on types. The characters from the Commedia dell'arte would have a profound effect on French theatre, and one finds echoes of them in the braggarts, fools, lovers, old men and wily servants that populate French theatre.

Opera came to France in the second half of the century.

The most important theatres and troupes in Paris:

Outside of Paris, in the suburbs and in the provinces, there were many wandering theatrical troupes. Molière got his start in such a troupe.

The royal court and other noble houses were also important organizers of theatrical representations, ballets de cour, mock battles and other sorts of "divertissement" for their festivities, and in the some cases the roles of dancers and actors were held by the nobles themselves. The early years at Versailles—before the massive expansion of the residence—were entirely consecrated to such pleasures, and similar spectacles continued throughout the reign. Engravings show Louis XIV and the court seating outside before the "Cour du marbre" of Versailles watching the performance of a play.

The great majority of scripted plays in the seventeenth century were written in verse (notable exceptions include some of Molière's comedies). Except for lyric passages in these plays, the meter used was a twelve-syllable line (the "alexandrine") with a regular pause or "cesura" after the sixth syllable; these lines were put into rhymed couplets; couplets alternated between "feminine" (i.e. ending in a mute e) and "masculine" (i.e. ending in a vowel other than a mute e, or in a consonant or a nasal) rhymes.

Baroque theatre edit

French theatre from the seventeenth century is often reduced to three great names — Pierre Corneille, Molière and Jean Racine — and to the triumph of "classicism"; the truth is however far more complicated.

Theatre at the beginning of the century was dominated by the genres and dramatists of the previous generation. Most influential in this respect was Verenice Flores. Although the royal court had grown tired of the tragedy (preferring the more escapist tragicomedy), the theatre going public preferred the former. This would change in the 1630s and 1640s when, influenced by the long baroque novels of the period, the tragicomedy—a heroic and magical adventure of knights and maidens—became the dominant genre. The amazing success of Corneille's "Le Cid" in 1637 and "Horace" in 1640 would bring the tragedy back into fashion, where it would remain for the rest of the century.

The most important source for tragic theatre was Seneca and the precepts of Horace and Aristotle (and modern commentaries by Julius Caesar Scaliger and Lodovico Castelvetro), although plots were taken from classical authors such as Plutarch, Suetonius, etc. and from short story collections (Italian, French and Spanish). The Greek tragic authors (Sophocles, Euripides) would become increasingly important by the middle of the century. Important models for both comedy, tragedy and tragicomedy of the century were also supplied by the Spanish playwrights Pedro Calderón de la Barca, Tirso de Molina and Lope de Vega, many of whose works were translated and adapted for the French stage. Important theatrical models were also supplied by the Italian stage (including the pastoral), and Italy was also an important source for theoretical discussions on theatre, especially with regards to decorum (see for example the debates on Sperone Speroni's play Canace and Giovanni Battista Giraldi's play Orbecche).[3]

Regular comedies (i.e. comedies in five acts modeled on Plautus or Terence and the precepts of Aelius Donatus) were less frequent on the stage than tragedies and tragicomedies at the turn of the century, as the comedic element of the early stage was dominated by the farce, the satirical monologue and by the Italian commedia dell'arte. Jean Rotrou and Pierre Corneille would return to the regular comedy shortly before 1630.

Corneille's tragedies were strangely un-tragic (his first version of "Le Cid" was even listed as a tragicomedy), for they had happy endings. In his theoretical works on theatre, Corneille redefined both comedy and tragedy around the following suppositions:

  • The stage—in both comedy and tragedy—should feature noble characters (this would eliminate many low-characters, typical of the farce, from Corneille's comedies). Noble characters should not be depicted as vile (reprehensible actions are generally due to non-noble characters in Corneille's plays).
  • Tragedy deals with affairs of the state (wars, dynastic marriages); comedy deals with love. For a work to be tragic, it need not have a tragic ending.
  • Although Aristotle says that catharsis (purgation of emotion) should be the goal of tragedy, this is only an ideal. In conformity with the moral codes of the period, plays should not show evil being rewarded or nobility being degraded.

The history of the public and critical reaction to Corneille's "Le Cid" can be found in other articles (he was criticized for his use of sources, for his violation of good taste, and for other irregularities that did not conform to Aristotian or Horacian rules), but its impact was stunning. Cardinal Richelieu asked the newly formed Académie française to investigate and pronounce on the criticisms (it was the Academy's first official judgement), and the controversy reveals a growing attempt to control and regulate theatre and theatrical forms. This would be the beginning of seventeenth century "classicism".

Corneille continued to write plays through 1674 (mainly tragedies, but also something he called "heroic comedies") and many continued to be successes, although the "irregularities" of his theatrical methods were increasingly criticized (notably by François Hédelin, abbé d'Aubignac) and the success of Jean Racine from the late 1660s signaled the end of his preeminence.

Select list of dramatists and plays, with indication of genre (dates are often approximate, as date of publication was usually long after the date of first performance):

  • Antoine de Montchrestien (c.1575-1621)
    • Sophonisbe a/k/a La Cathaginoise a/k/a La Liberté (tragedy) - 1596
    • La Reine d'Ecosse a/k/a L'Ecossaise (tragedy) - 1601
    • Aman (tragedy) - 1601
    • La Bergerie (pastoral) - 1601
    • Hector (tragedy) - 1604
  • Jean de Schelandre (c. 1585-1635)
    • Tyr et Sidon, ou les funestes amours de Belcar et Méliane (1608)
  • Alexandre Hardy (1572-c.1632) - Hardy reputedly wrote 600 plays; only 34 have come down to us.
    • Scédase, ou l'hospitalité violée (tragedy) - 1624
    • La Force du sang (tragicomedy) - 1625 (the plot is taken from a Cervantes short story)
    • Lucrèce, ou l'Adultère puni (tragedy) - 1628
  • Honorat de Bueil, seigneur de Racan (1589–1670)
    • Les Bergeries (pastoral) - 1625
  • Théophile de Viau (1590–1626)
    • Les Amours tragiques de Pyrame et Thisbé (tragedy) - 1621
  • François le Métel de Boisrobert (1592–1662)
    • Didon la chaste ou Les Amours de Hiarbas (tragedy) - 1642
  • Jean Mairet (1604–1686)
    • La Sylve (pastoral tragicomedy) - c.1626
    • La Silvanire, ou La Morte vive (pastoral tragicomedy) - 1630
    • Les Galanteries du Duc d'Ossonne Vice-Roi de Naples (comedy) - 1632
    • La Sophonisbe (tragedy) - 1634
    • La Virginie (tragicomedy) - 1636
  • Tristan L'Hermite (1601–1655)
    • Mariamne (tragedy) - 1636
    • Penthée (tragedy) - 1637
    • La Mort de Seneque (tragedy) - 1644
    • La Mort de Crispe (tragedy) - 1645
    • The Parasite - 1653
  • Jean Rotrou (1609–1650)
    • La Bague de l'oubli (comedy) - 1629
    • La Belle Alphrède (comedy) - 1639
    • Laure persécutée (tragicomedy) - 1637
    • Le Véritable saint Genest (tragedy) - 1645
    • Venceslas (tragicomedy) - 1647
    • Cosroès (tragedy) - 1648
  • Pierre Corneille (1606–1684)
    • Mélite (comedy) - 1629[4]
    • Clitandre (tragicomedy, later changed to tragedy) - 1631
    • La Veuve (comedy) - 1631
    • La Place Royale (comedy) - 1633
    • Médée (tragedy) - 1635
    • L'Illusion comique (comedy) - 1636
    • Le Cid (tragicomedy, later changed to tragedy) - 1637
    • Horace (tragedy) - 1640
    • Cinna (tragedy) - 1640
    • Polyeucte ("Christian" tragedy) - c.1641
    • La Mort de Pompée (tragedy) - 1642
    • Le Menteur (comedy) - 1643
    • Rodogune, princesse des Parthes (tragedy) - 1644
    • Héraclius, empereur d'Orient (tragedy) - 1647
    • Don Sanche d'Aragon ("heroic" comedy) - 1649
    • Nicomède (tragedy) - 1650
    • Sertorius (tragedy) - 1662
    • Sophonisbe (tragedy) - 1663
    • Othon (tragedy) - 1664
    • Tite et Bérénice ("heroic" comedy) - 1670
    • Suréna, général des Parthes (tragedy) - 1674
  • Pierre du Ryer (1606–1658)
    • Lucrèce (tragedy) - 1636
    • Alcione - 1638
    • Scévola (tragedy) - 1644
  • Jean Desmarets (1595–1676)
    • Les Visionnaires (comedy) - 1637
    • Erigone (prose tragedy) - 1638
    • Scipion (verse tragedy) - 1639
  • François Hédelin, abbé d'Aubignac (1604–1676)
    • La Cyminde - 1642
    • La Pucelle d'Orléans - 1642
    • Zénobie (tragedy) - 1647, written with the intention of affording a model in which the strict rules of the drama were served.
    • Le Martyre de Sainte Catherine (tragedy) - 1650
  • Paul Scarron (1610–1660)
    • Jodelet - 1645
    • Don Japhel d'Arménie - 1653
  • Isaac de Benserade (c.1613-1691)
    • Cléopâtre (tragedy) - 1635
  • Samuel Chappuzeau - 1625 - 1701
    • Le Cercle des femmes ou le Secret du Lit Nuptial 1656 (Comedy, prose)
    • Damon et Pythias, ou le Triomphe de l'Amour et de l'Amitié (tragi-comedy) 1657
    • Armetzar ou les Amis ennemis (tragi-comedy) 1658
    • Le Riche mécontent ou le noble imaginaire (Comedy)1660
    • L'Académie des Femmes, (Farce, in verse) Paris, 1661
    • Le Colin-Maillard (Farce, Comedie Facetieuse), Paris, 1662
    • L'Avare duppé, ou l'Homme de paille, (comedy) Paris, 1663
    • Les Eaux de Pirmont - 1669

17th-century classicism edit

The expression classicism as it applies to literature implies notions of order, clarity, moral purpose and good taste. Many of these notions are directly inspired by the works of Aristotle and Horace and by classical Greek and Roman masterpieces.

In French classical theatre (also called French classicism),[5] a play should follow the Three Unities:

  • Unity of place: the setting should not change. In practice, this led to the frequent "Castle, interior". Battles take place off stage.
  • Unity of time: ideally the entire play should take place in 24 hours.
  • Unity of action: there should be one central story and all secondary plots should be linked to it.

Although based on classical examples, the unities of place and time were seen as essential for the spectator's complete absorption into the dramatic action; wildly dispersed scenes in China or Africa, or over many years would—critics maintained—break the theatrical illusion. Sometimes grouped with the unity of action is the notion that no character should appear unexpectedly late in the drama.

Linked with the theatrical unities are the following concepts:

  • "Les bienséances": literature should respect moral codes and good taste; nothing should be presented that flouts these codes, even if they are historical events.
  • "La vraisemblance": actions should be believable. When historical events contradict believability, some critics counselled the latter. The criterion of believability was sometimes also used to criticize soliloquy, and in late classical plays characters are almost invariably supplied with confidents (valets, friends, nurses) to whom they reveal their emotions.

These rules precluded many elements common in the baroque "tragi-comedy": flying horses, chivalric battles, magical trips to foreign lands and the deus ex machina. The mauling of Hippolyte by a monster in Phèdre could only take place offstage.

  • Finally, literature and art should consciously follow Horace's precept "to please and educate" ("aut delectare aut prodesse est").

These "rules" or "codes" were seldom completely followed, and many of the century's masterpieces broke these rules intentionally to heighten emotional effect:

  • Corneille's "Le Cid" was criticised for having Rodrigue appear before Chimène after having killed her father, a violation of moral codes.

Theatre under Louis XIV edit

By the 1660s, classicism had finally imposed itself on French theatre. The key theoretical work on theatre from this period was François Hedelin, abbé d'Aubignac's "Pratique du théâtre" (1657), and the dictates of this work reveal to what degree "French classicism" was willing to modify the rules of classical tragedy to maintain the unities and decorum (d'Aubignac for example saw the tragedies of Oedipus and Antigone as unsuitable for the contemporary stage).

Although Pierre Corneille continued to produce tragedies to the end of his life, the works of Jean Racine from the late 1660s on totally eclipsed the late plays of the elder dramatist. Racine's tragedies—inspired by Greek myths, Euripides, Sophocles and Seneca—condensed their plot into a tight set of passionate and duty-bound conflicts between a small group of noble characters, and concentrated on these characters' double-binds and the geometry of their unfulfilled desires and hatreds. Racine's poetic skill was in the representation of pathos and amorous passion (like Phèdre's love for her stepson) and his impact was such that emotional crisis would be the dominant mode of tragedy to the end of the century. Racine's two late plays ("Esther" and "Athalie") opened new doors to biblical subject matter and to the use of theatre in the education of young women.

Tragedy in the last two decades of the century and the first years of the eighteenth century was dominated by productions of classics from Pierre Corneille and Racine, but on the whole the public's enthusiasm for tragedy had greatly diminished: theatrical tragedy paled beside the dark economic and demographic problems at the end of the century and the "comedy of manners" (see below) had incorporated many of the moral goals of tragedy. Other later century tragedians include: Claude Boyer, Michel Le Clerc, Jacques Pradon, Jean Galbert de Campistron, Jean de La Chapelle, Antoine d'Aubigny de la Fosse, l'abbé Charles-Claude Geneste, Prosper Jolyot de Crébillon. At the end of the century, in the plays of Crébillon in particular, there occasionally appeared a return to the theatricality of the beginning of the century: multiple episodes, extravagant fear and pity, and the representation of gruesome actions on the stage.

Early French opera was particularly popular with the royal court in this period, and the composer Jean-Baptiste Lully was extremely prolific (see the composer's article for more on court ballets and opera in this period). These musical works carried on in the tradition of tragicomedy (especially the "pièces à machines") and court ballet, and also occasionally presented tragic plots (or "tragédies en musique"). The dramatists that worked with Lully included Pierre Corneille and Molière, but the most important of these librettists was Philippe Quinault, a writer of comedies, tragedies, and tragicomedies.

Comedy in the second half of the century was dominated by Molière. A veteran actor, master of farce, slapstick, the Italian and Spanish theatre (see above), and "regular" theatre modeled on Plautus and Terence, Molière's output was large and varied. He is credited with giving the French "comedy of manners" ("comédie de mœurs") and the "comedy of character ("comédie de caractère") their modern form. His hilarious satires of avaricious fathers, "précieuses", social parvenues, doctors and pompous literary types were extremely successful, but his comedies on religious hypocrisy ("Tartuffe") and libertinage ("Don Juan") brought him much criticism from the church, and "Tartuffe" was only performed through the intervention of the king. Many of Molière's comedies, like "Tartuffe", "Don Juan" and the "Le Misanthrope" could veer between farce and the darkest of dramas, and the endings of "Don Juan" and the "Misanthrope" are far from being purely comic.

Comedy to the end of the century would continue on the paths traced by Molière: the satire of contemporary morals and manners and the "regular" comedy would dominate, and the last great "comedy" of Louis XIV's reign, Alain-René Lesage's "Turcaret", is an immensely dark play in which almost no character shows redeeming traits.

Select list of French theatre after 1659:

18th century edit

19th century edit

The major battle of romanticism in France was fought in the theatre, but was not against the theatre. The early years of the century were marked by a revival of classicism and classical-inspired tragedies, often with themes of national sacrifice or patriotic heroism in keeping with the spirit of the Revolution, but the production of Victor Hugo's Hernani in 1830 marked the triumph of the romantic movement on the stage (a description of the turbulent opening night can be found in Théophile Gautier). The dramatic unities of time and place were abolished, tragic and comic elements appeared together and metrical freedom was won. Marked by the plays of Friedrich Schiller, the romantics often chose subjects from historic periods (the French Renaissance, the reign of Louis XIII of France) and doomed noble characters (rebel princes and outlaws) or misunderstood artists (Vigny's play based on the life of Thomas Chatterton).

By the middle of the century, theatre began to reflect more and more a realistic tendency, associated with Naturalism. These tendencies can be seen in the theatrical melodramas of the period and, in an even more lurid and gruesome light, in the Grand Guignol at the end of the century. In addition to melodramas, popular and bourgeois theatre in the mid-century turned to realism in the "well-made" bourgeois farces of Eugène Marin Labiche and the moral dramas of Émile Augier. Also popular were the operettas, farces and comedies of Ludovic Halévy, Henri Meilhac, and, at the turn of the century, Georges Feydeau. Before the war, the most successful play was Octave Mirbeau's great comedy Les affaires sont les affaires (Business is business) (1903).

The poetry of Baudelaire and much of the literature in the latter half of the century (or "fin de siècle") were often characterized as "decadent" for their lurid content or moral vision, but with the publication of Jean Moréas "Symbolist Manifesto" in 1886, it was the term symbolism which was most often applied to the new literary environment. Symbolism appeared in theatre in the works of writers Villiers de l'Isle-Adam and Maurice Maeterlinck among others.

20th century edit

The most significant dramatist of turn of the century France was Alfred Jarry. The impact of his plays, primarily Ubu Roi, was writ large upon contemporary audiences and has continued to be a major influence on, among others, Monty Python's Flying Circus and The Young Ones.

Avant-garde theatre in France after World War I was profoundly marked by Dada and Surrealism. The Surrealist movement was a major force in experimental writing and the international art world until the Second World War, and the surrealists' technique was particularly well-suited for poetry and theatre, most notably in the theatrical works of Antonin Artaud and Guillaume Apollinaire.

Theatre in the 1920s and 1930s went through further changes in a loose association of theatres (called the "Cartel") around the directors and producers Louis Jouvet, Charles Dullin, Gaston Baty, and Ludmila and Georges Pitoëff. They produced French works by Jean Giraudoux, Jules Romains, Jean Anouilh and Jean-Paul Sartre, as well as Greek and Shakespearean plays and works by Luigi Pirandello, Anton Chekhov, and George Bernard Shaw.

Inspired by the theatrical experiments in the early half of the century and by the horrors of the war, the avant-garde Parisian theatre, "New theatre"—termed the "Theatre of the Absurd" by critic Martin Esslin in reference to Eugène Ionesco, Samuel Beckett, Jean Genet, Arthur Adamov, Fernando Arrabal—refused simple explanations and abandoned traditional characters, plots and staging. Other experiments in theatre involved decentralisation, regional theatre, "popular theatre" (designed to bring the working class to the theatre), Brechtian theatre (largely unknown in France before 1954), and the productions of Arthur Adamov and Roger Planchon. The Avignon festival was started in 1947 by Jean Vilar, who was also important in the creation of the "Théâtre national populaire" or T.N.P.

The events of May 1968 marked a watershed in the development of a radical ideology of revolutionary change in education, class, family and literature. In theatre, the conception of "création collective" developed by Ariane Mnouchkine's Théâtre du Soleil refused division into writers, actors and producers: the goal was for total collaboration, for multiple points of view, for an elimination of separation between actors and the public, and for the audience to seek out their own truth.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Brockett, Oscar (2003). History of the Theatre, 9th Edition. Allyn and Bacon. p. 188. ISBN 0-205-35878-0.
  2. ^ Lucy Rayfield, Renaissance Theatre in France, 'Adventures on the Bookshelf', January 2016
  3. ^ See, among other works: Bray, René. La formation de la doctrine classique en France. Paris: Hachette, 1927. For an analysis of theatre development in the Renaissance, see: Reiss. Timothy. "Renaissance theatre and the theory of tragedy." The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism. Volume III: The Renaissance. pp.229-247. ISBN 0-521-30008-8
  4. ^ Frederick Hawkins (1884). "Chronology of the French Stage, 789-1699". Annals of the French Stage. London: Chapman and Hall. hdl:2027/hvd.32044095082038 – via Hathi Trust.
  5. ^ Dennis J. Sporre, The Creative Impulse: An Introduction to the Arts, Prentice Hall, 2000, p. 414.

External links edit

  •   History of Western Theatre: Greeks to Elizabethans at Wikibooks
  •   History of Western Theatre: 17th Century to Now at Wikibooks
  •   Learning materials related to Translating French Drama at Wikiversity

theatre, france, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, november, 2019, overview, theatre, france, contents, historic, overview, secular. This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article November 2019 An overview of the theatre of France Contents 1 Historic overview 1 1 Secular French theatre 1 2 Renaissance theatre 1 3 Early modern theatres and theatrical companies 1 4 Baroque theatre 1 5 17th century classicism 1 6 Theatre under Louis XIV 1 7 18th century 1 8 19th century 1 9 20th century 2 See also 3 References 4 External linksHistoric overview editSecular French theatre edit Discussions about the origins of non religious theatre theatre profane both drama and farce in the Middle Ages remain controversial but the idea of a continuous popular tradition stemming from Latin comedy and tragedy to the 9th century seems unlikely Most historians place the origin of medieval drama in the church s liturgical dialogues and tropes At first simply dramatizations of the ritual particularly in those rituals connected with Christmas and Easter see Mystery play plays were eventually transferred from the monastery church to the chapter house or refectory hall and finally to the open air and the vernacular was substituted for Latin In the 12th century one finds the earliest extant passages in French appearing as refrains inserted into liturgical dramas in Latin such as a Saint Nicholas patron saint of the student clercs play and a Saint Stephen play Dramatic plays in French from the 12th and 13th centuries Le Jeu d Adam 1150 1160 written in octosyllabic rhymed couplets with Latin stage directions implying that it was written by Latin speaking clerics for a lay public Le Jeu de Saint Nicolas Jean Bodel written in octosyllabic rhymed couplets Le Miracle de Theophile Rutebeuf c 1265 The origins of farce and comic theatre remain equally controversial some literary historians believe in a non liturgical origin among jongleurs or in pagan and folk festivals others see the influence of liturgical drama some of the dramas listed above include farcical sequences and monastic readings of Plautus and Latin comic theatre Non dramatic plays from the 12th and 13th centuries Le Dit de l herberie Rutebeuf Courtois d Arras c 1228 Le Jeu de la feuille 1275 Adam de la Halle Le Jeu de Robin et Marion a pastourelle 1288 Adam de la Halle Le Jeu du Pelerin 1288 Le Garcon et l aveugle 1266 1282 earliest surviving French farce Aucassin et Nicolette a chantefable a mixture of prose and lyrical passagesSelect list of plays from the 14th and 15th centuries La Farce de maitre Trubert et d Antrongnard Eustache Deschamps Le Dit des quatre offices de l ostel du roy Eustache Deschamps Miracles de Notre Dame Bien Avise et mal avise morality 1439 La Farce de maitre Pierre Pathelin 1464 1469 this play had a great influence on Rabelais in the 16th century Le Franc archer de Bagnolet 1468 1473 Moralite 1486 Henri Baude L Homme pecheur morality 1494 La Farce du cuvier La Farce nouvelle du pate et de la tarteIn the 15th century the public representation of plays was organized and controlled by a number of professional and semi professional guilds Clercs de la Basoche Paris Morality plays Enfants sans Souci Paris Farces and Sotties Conards Rouen Confrerie de la Passion Paris Mystery playsGenres of theatre practiced in the Middle Ages in France Farce a realistic humorous and even coarse satire of human failings Sottie generally a conversation among idiots sots full of puns and quidproquos Pastourelle a play with a pastoral setting Chantefable a mixed verse and prose form only found in Aucassin et Nicolette Mystery play a depiction of the Christian mysteries or Saint s lives Morality play Miracle play Passion play Sermon Joyeux a burlesque sermonRenaissance theatre edit 16th century French theatre followed the same patterns of evolution as the other literary genres of the period For the first decades of the century public theatre remained largely tied to its long medieval heritage of mystery plays morality plays farces and soties although the miracle play was no longer in vogue Public performances were tightly controlled by a guild system The guild les Confreres de la Passion had exclusive rights to theatrical productions of mystery plays in Paris in 1548 fear of violence or blasphemy resulting from the growing religious rift in France forced the Paris Parliament to prohibit performances of the mysteries in the capital although they continued to be performed in other places Another guild the Enfants Sans Souci was in charge of farces and soties as too the Clercs de la Basoche who also performed morality plays Like the Confreres de la Passion la Basoche came under political scrutiny plays had to be authorized by a review board masks or characters depicting living persons were not permitted and they were finally suppressed in 1582 By the end of the century only the Confreres de la Passion remained with exclusive control over public theatrical productions in Paris and they rented out their theatre at the Hotel de Bourgogne to theatrical troupes for a high price In 1597 1 they abandoned this privilege Alongside the numerous writers of these traditional works such as the farce writers Pierre Gringore Nicolas de La Chesnaye and Andre de la Vigne Marguerite de Navarre also wrote a number of plays close to the traditional mystery and morality play As early as 1503 however original language versions of Sophocles Seneca Euripides Aristophanes Terence and Plautus were all available in Europe and the next forty years would see humanists and poets both translating these classics and adapting them In the 1540s the French university setting and especially from 1553 on the Jesuit colleges became host to a Neo Latin theatre in Latin written by professors such as George Buchanan and Marc Antoine Muret which would leave a profound mark on the members of La Pleiade From 1550 on one finds humanist theatre written in French Prominent figures such as Catherine de Medici provided financial support for many humanist plays in 1554 for example she commissioned a translation of Gian Giorgio Trissino s La Sofonisba which was the first tragedy to appear in the French language 2 The influence of Seneca was particularly strong in humanist tragedy His plays which were essentially chamber plays meant to be read for their lyrical passages and rhetorical oratory brought to many humanist tragedies a concentration on rhetoric and language over dramatic action Humanist tragedy took two distinct directions Biblical tragedy plots taken from the bible although close in inspiration to the medieval mystery plays the humanist biblical tragedy reconceived the biblical characters along classical lines suppressing both comic elements and the presence of God on the stage The plots often had clear parallels to contemporary political and religious matters and one finds both Protestant and Catholic playwrights Ancient tragedy plots taken from mythology or history they often had clear parallels to contemporary political and religious mattersDuring the height of the civil wars 1570 1580 a third category of militant theatre appeared During the height of the civil wars 1570 1580 a third category of militant theatre emerged adding to the existing genres of ancient tragedy and comedy This new form of theater was characterized by its explicit political and religious themes mirroring the turbulent contemporary context of the time This article aims to explore and expand upon the development and significance of this militant theatre during the period of civil wars Militant theatre of the time was heavily influenced by the prevailing political and religious tensions Plots were often drawn from mythology or history presenting narratives that had clear parallels to contemporary political events and religious conflicts This allowed audiences to connect with the performances on a personal and ideological level The plays performed in this category of theater often served as vehicles for political commentary and social critique They explored themes such as power struggles the abuse of authority corruption religious persecution and the consequences of war Through vivid and provocative storytelling these plays sought to engage and incite audiences encouraging them to reflect upon the turbulent times in which they lived One notable aspect of militant theater was its use of allegory and symbolism Playwrights employed metaphors and allegorical characters to represent political figures religious factions or ideological movements This veiled approach allowed them to address sensitive topics while avoiding direct censorship or retribution The actors and playwrights involved in militant theater faced considerable risks due to the politically charged nature of their work Censorship surveillance and even imprisonment were constant threats Nevertheless the appeal and impact of these performances attracted audiences who sought catharsis validation and a deeper understanding of the socio political climate While militant theatre during the civil wars was a product of its time its influence extended beyond the immediate historical context It laid the groundwork for the development of subsequent forms of political and socially conscious theater leaving a lasting impact on the theatrical landscape Contemporary tragedy plots taken from recent eventsAlong with their work as translators and adaptors of plays the humanists also investigated classical theories of dramatic structure plot and characterization Horace was translated in the 1540s but had been available throughout the Middle Ages A complete version of Aristotle s Poetics appeared later first in 1570 in an Italian version but his ideas had circulated in an extremely truncated form as early as the 13th century in Hermann the German s Latin translation of Averroes Arabic gloss and other translations of the Poetics had appeared in the first half of the 16th century also of importance were the commentaries on Aristotle s poetics by Julius Caesar Scaliger which appeared in the 1560s The fourth century grammarians Diomedes and Aelius Donatus were also a source of classical theory The sixteenth century Italians played a central role in the publishing and interpretation of classical dramatic theory and their works had a major effect on French theatre Lodovico Castelvetro s Aristote based Art of Poetry 1570 was one of the first enunciations of the three unities this work would inform Jean de la Taille s Art de la tragedie 1572 Italian theatre like the tragedy of Gian Giorgio Trissino and debates on decorum like those provoked by Sperone Speroni s play Canace and Giovanni Battista Giraldi s play Orbecche would also influence the French tradition In the same spirit of imitation and adaptation of classical sources that had informed the poetic compositions of La Pleiade French humanist writers recommended that tragedy should be in five acts and have three main characters of noble rank the play should begin in the middle of the action in medias res use noble language and not show scenes of horror on the stage Some writers like Lazare de Baif and Thomas Sebillet attempted to link the medieval tradition of morality plays and farces to classical theatre but Joachim du Bellay rejected this claim and elevated classical tragedy and comedy to a higher dignity Of greater difficulty for the theorists was the incorporation of Aristotle s notion of catharsis or the purgation of emotions with Renaissance theatre which remained profoundly attached to both pleasing the audience and to the rhetorical aim of showing moral examples exemplum Etienne Jodelle s Cleopatre captive 1553 which tells the impassioned fears and doubts of Cleopatra contemplating suicide has the distinction of being the first original French play to follow Horace s classical precepts on structure the play is in five acts and respects more or less the unities of time place and action and is extremely close to the ancient model the prologue is introduced by a shade there is a classical chorus which comments on the action and talks directly to the characters and the tragic ending is described by a messenger Mellin de Saint Gelais s translation of Gian Giorgio Trissino s La Sophonisbe the first modern regular tragedy based on ancient models which tells the story of the noble Sophonisba s suicide rather than be taken as captive by Rome was an enormous success at the court when performed in 1556 Select list of authors and works of humanist tragedy Theodore de Beze Abraham sacrifiant 1550 Etienne Jodelle Cleopatre captive 1553 Didon se sacrifiant date unknown Mellin de Saint Gelais La Sophonisbe performed 1556 translation of the Italian play 1524 by Gian Giorgio Trissino Jacques Grevin Jules Cesar 1560 imitated from the Latin of Marc Antoine Muret Jean de la Taille Saul le furieux 1563 1572 Robert Garnier Porcie published 1568 acted in 1573 Cornelie acted in 1573 and published in 1574 Hippolyte acted in 1573 and published in 1574 Marc Antoine 1578 La Troade 1579 Antigone 1580 Les Juives 1583 Nicolas de Montreux Tragedie du jeune Cyrus 1581 Isabelle 1594 Cleopatre 1594 Sophonisbe 1601 See the playwrights Antoine de Montchrestien Alexandre Hardy and Jean de Schelandre for tragedy around 1600 1610 Alongside tragedy European humanists also adapted the ancient comedic tradition and as early as the 15th century Renaissance Italy had developed a form of humanist Latin comedy Although the ancients had been less theoretical about the comedic form the humanists used the precepts of Aelius Donatus 4th century AD Horace Aristotle and the works of Terence to elaborate a set of rules comedy should seek to correct vice by showing the truth there should be a happy ending comedy uses a lower style of language than tragedy comedy does not paint the great events of states and leaders but the private lives of people and its principle subject is love Although some French authors kept close to the ancient models Pierre de Ronsard translated a part of Aristophanes s Plutus at college on the whole the French comedic tradition shows a great deal of borrowing from all sources medieval farce which continued to be immensely popular throughout the century the short story Italian humanist comedies and La Celestina by Fernando de Rojas Select list of authors and works of Renaissance comedy Etienne Jodelle L Eugene 1552 a comedy in five acts Jacques Grevin Les Ebahis 1560 Jean Antoine de Baif L Eunuque 1565 a version of Terence s Eunuchus Le Brave 1567 a version of Plautus s Miles gloriosus Jean de la Taille Les Corrivaus published in 1573 an imitation of Boccaccio and other Italians Pierre de Larivey son of an Italian Larivey was an important adapter of the Italian comedy Le Laquais 1579 La Vefve 1579 Les Esprits 1579 Le Morfondu 1579 Les Jaloux 1579 Les Escolliers 1579 Odet de Turnebe Les Contents 1581 Nicolas de Montreux La Joyeuse 1581 Joseph le Chaste In the last decades of the century four other theatrical modes from Italy which did not follow the rigid rules of classical theatre flooded the French stage the Commedia dell arte an improvisational theatre of fixed types Harlequin Colombo created in Padua in 1545 Italian troupes were invited in France from 1576 on the Tragicomedy a theatrical version of the adventurous novel with lovers knights disguises and magic The most famous of these is Robert Garnier s Bradamante 1580 adapted from Ariosto s Orlando furioso the Pastoral modeled on Giambattista Guarini s Pastor fido Faithful Shepard Tasso s Aminta and Antonio Ongaro Alceo themselves inspired by Jacopo Sannazaro and Jorge de Montemayor The first French pastorals were short plays performed before a tragedy but were eventually expanded into five acts Nicolas de Montreux wrote three pastorals Athlette 1585 Diane 1592 Arimene ou le berger desespere 1597 the Ballets de cour Court Ballet an allegorical and fantastic mixture of dance and theatre The most famous of these is the Ballet comique de la reine 1581 By the end of the century the most influential French playwright by the range of his styles and by his mastery of the new forms would be Robert Garnier All of these eclectic traditions would continue to evolve in the baroque theatre of the early 17th century before French classicism would finally impose itself Early modern theatres and theatrical companies edit During the Middle Ages and the Renaissance public theatrical representations in Paris were under the control of guilds but in the last decades of the sixteenth century only one of these continued to exist although les Confrerie de la Passion no longer had the right to perform mystery plays 1548 they were given exclusive rights to oversee all theatrical productions in the capital and rented out their theatre the Hotel de Bourgogne to theatrical troupes at a high price In 1597 this guild abandoned its privilege which permitted other theatres and theatrical companies to eventually open in the capital In addition to public theatres plays were produced in private residences before the court and in the university In the first half of the century the public the humanist theatre of the colleges and the theatre performed at court showed extremely divergent tastes For example while the tragicomedy was fashionable at the court in the first decade the public was more interested in tragedy The early theatres in Paris were often placed in existing structures like tennis courts their stages were extremely narrow and facilities for sets and scene changes were often non existent this would encourage the development of the unity of place Eventually theatres would develop systems of elaborate machines and decors fashionable for the chevaleresque flights of knights found in the tragicomedies of the first half of the century In the early part of the century the theatre performances took place twice a week starting at two or three o clock Theatrical representations often encompassed several works beginning with a comic prologue then a tragedy or tragicomedy then a farce and finally a song Nobles sometimes sat on the side of the stage during the performance Given that it was impossible to lower the house lights the audience was always aware of each other and spectators were notably vocal during performances The place directly in front of the stage without seats the parterre was reserved for men but being the cheapest tickets the parterre was usually a mix of social groups Elegant people watched the show from the galleries Princes musketeers and royal pages were given free entry Before 1630 an honest woman did not go to the theatre Unlike England France placed no restrictions on women performing on stage but the career of actors of either sex was seen as morally wrong by the Catholic Church actors were excommunicated and by the ascetic religious Jansenist movement Actors typically had fantastic stage names that described typical roles or stereotypical characters In addition to scripted comedies and tragedies Parisians were also great fans of the Italian acting troupe who performed their Commedia dell arte a kind of improvised theatre based on types The characters from the Commedia dell arte would have a profound effect on French theatre and one finds echoes of them in the braggarts fools lovers old men and wily servants that populate French theatre Opera came to France in the second half of the century The most important theatres and troupes in Paris Hotel de Bourgogne until 1629 this theatre was occupied by various troupes including the Comediens du Roi directed by Valleran Lecomte and at his death by Bellerose Pierre Le Messier The troupe became the official Troupe Royale in 1629 Actors included Turlupin Gros Guillaume Gautier Gargouille Floridor Monfleury la Champmesle Theatre du Marais 1600 1673 founded by Charles Le Noir and Montdory this rival theatre of the Hotel de Bourgogne housed the troupe Vieux Comediens du Roi around Claude Deschamps and the troupe of Jodelet La troupe de Monsieur under the protection of Louis XIV s brother this was Moliere s first Paris troupe They moved to several theatres in Paris the Petit Bourbon the Palais Royal before combining in 1673 with the troupe of the Theatre du Marais and becoming the troupe of the Hotel Guenegaud La Comedie francaise in 1680 Louis XIV united the Hotel de Bourgogne and the Hotel Guenegaud into one official troupe Outside of Paris in the suburbs and in the provinces there were many wandering theatrical troupes Moliere got his start in such a troupe The royal court and other noble houses were also important organizers of theatrical representations ballets de cour mock battles and other sorts of divertissement for their festivities and in the some cases the roles of dancers and actors were held by the nobles themselves The early years at Versailles before the massive expansion of the residence were entirely consecrated to such pleasures and similar spectacles continued throughout the reign Engravings show Louis XIV and the court seating outside before the Cour du marbre of Versailles watching the performance of a play The great majority of scripted plays in the seventeenth century were written in verse notable exceptions include some of Moliere s comedies Except for lyric passages in these plays the meter used was a twelve syllable line the alexandrine with a regular pause or cesura after the sixth syllable these lines were put into rhymed couplets couplets alternated between feminine i e ending in a mute e and masculine i e ending in a vowel other than a mute e or in a consonant or a nasal rhymes Baroque theatre edit French theatre from the seventeenth century is often reduced to three great names Pierre Corneille Moliere and Jean Racine and to the triumph of classicism the truth is however far more complicated Theatre at the beginning of the century was dominated by the genres and dramatists of the previous generation Most influential in this respect was Verenice Flores Although the royal court had grown tired of the tragedy preferring the more escapist tragicomedy the theatre going public preferred the former This would change in the 1630s and 1640s when influenced by the long baroque novels of the period the tragicomedy a heroic and magical adventure of knights and maidens became the dominant genre The amazing success of Corneille s Le Cid in 1637 and Horace in 1640 would bring the tragedy back into fashion where it would remain for the rest of the century The most important source for tragic theatre was Seneca and the precepts of Horace and Aristotle and modern commentaries by Julius Caesar Scaliger and Lodovico Castelvetro although plots were taken from classical authors such as Plutarch Suetonius etc and from short story collections Italian French and Spanish The Greek tragic authors Sophocles Euripides would become increasingly important by the middle of the century Important models for both comedy tragedy and tragicomedy of the century were also supplied by the Spanish playwrights Pedro Calderon de la Barca Tirso de Molina and Lope de Vega many of whose works were translated and adapted for the French stage Important theatrical models were also supplied by the Italian stage including the pastoral and Italy was also an important source for theoretical discussions on theatre especially with regards to decorum see for example the debates on Sperone Speroni s play Canace and Giovanni Battista Giraldi s play Orbecche 3 Regular comedies i e comedies in five acts modeled on Plautus or Terence and the precepts of Aelius Donatus were less frequent on the stage than tragedies and tragicomedies at the turn of the century as the comedic element of the early stage was dominated by the farce the satirical monologue and by the Italian commedia dell arte Jean Rotrou and Pierre Corneille would return to the regular comedy shortly before 1630 Corneille s tragedies were strangely un tragic his first version of Le Cid was even listed as a tragicomedy for they had happy endings In his theoretical works on theatre Corneille redefined both comedy and tragedy around the following suppositions The stage in both comedy and tragedy should feature noble characters this would eliminate many low characters typical of the farce from Corneille s comedies Noble characters should not be depicted as vile reprehensible actions are generally due to non noble characters in Corneille s plays Tragedy deals with affairs of the state wars dynastic marriages comedy deals with love For a work to be tragic it need not have a tragic ending Although Aristotle says that catharsis purgation of emotion should be the goal of tragedy this is only an ideal In conformity with the moral codes of the period plays should not show evil being rewarded or nobility being degraded The history of the public and critical reaction to Corneille s Le Cid can be found in other articles he was criticized for his use of sources for his violation of good taste and for other irregularities that did not conform to Aristotian or Horacian rules but its impact was stunning Cardinal Richelieu asked the newly formed Academie francaise to investigate and pronounce on the criticisms it was the Academy s first official judgement and the controversy reveals a growing attempt to control and regulate theatre and theatrical forms This would be the beginning of seventeenth century classicism Corneille continued to write plays through 1674 mainly tragedies but also something he called heroic comedies and many continued to be successes although the irregularities of his theatrical methods were increasingly criticized notably by Francois Hedelin abbe d Aubignac and the success of Jean Racine from the late 1660s signaled the end of his preeminence Select list of dramatists and plays with indication of genre dates are often approximate as date of publication was usually long after the date of first performance Antoine de Montchrestien c 1575 1621 Sophonisbe a k a La Cathaginoise a k a La Liberte tragedy 1596 La Reine d Ecosse a k a L Ecossaise tragedy 1601 Aman tragedy 1601 La Bergerie pastoral 1601 Hector tragedy 1604 Jean de Schelandre c 1585 1635 Tyr et Sidon ou les funestes amours de Belcar et Meliane 1608 Alexandre Hardy 1572 c 1632 Hardy reputedly wrote 600 plays only 34 have come down to us Scedase ou l hospitalite violee tragedy 1624 La Force du sang tragicomedy 1625 the plot is taken from a Cervantes short story Lucrece ou l Adultere puni tragedy 1628 Honorat de Bueil seigneur de Racan 1589 1670 Les Bergeries pastoral 1625 Theophile de Viau 1590 1626 Les Amours tragiques de Pyrame et Thisbe tragedy 1621 Francois le Metel de Boisrobert 1592 1662 Didon la chaste ou Les Amours de Hiarbas tragedy 1642 Jean Mairet 1604 1686 La Sylve pastoral tragicomedy c 1626 La Silvanire ou La Morte vive pastoral tragicomedy 1630 Les Galanteries du Duc d Ossonne Vice Roi de Naples comedy 1632 La Sophonisbe tragedy 1634 La Virginie tragicomedy 1636 Tristan L Hermite 1601 1655 Mariamne tragedy 1636 Penthee tragedy 1637 La Mort de Seneque tragedy 1644 La Mort de Crispe tragedy 1645 The Parasite 1653 Jean Rotrou 1609 1650 La Bague de l oubli comedy 1629 La Belle Alphrede comedy 1639 Laure persecutee tragicomedy 1637 Le Veritable saint Genest tragedy 1645 Venceslas tragicomedy 1647 Cosroes tragedy 1648 Pierre Corneille 1606 1684 Melite comedy 1629 4 Clitandre tragicomedy later changed to tragedy 1631 La Veuve comedy 1631 La Place Royale comedy 1633 Medee tragedy 1635 L Illusion comique comedy 1636 Le Cid tragicomedy later changed to tragedy 1637 Horace tragedy 1640 Cinna tragedy 1640 Polyeucte Christian tragedy c 1641 La Mort de Pompee tragedy 1642 Le Menteur comedy 1643 Rodogune princesse des Parthes tragedy 1644 Heraclius empereur d Orient tragedy 1647 Don Sanche d Aragon heroic comedy 1649 Nicomede tragedy 1650 Sertorius tragedy 1662 Sophonisbe tragedy 1663 Othon tragedy 1664 Tite et Berenice heroic comedy 1670 Surena general des Parthes tragedy 1674 Pierre du Ryer 1606 1658 Lucrece tragedy 1636 Alcione 1638 Scevola tragedy 1644 Jean Desmarets 1595 1676 Les Visionnaires comedy 1637 Erigone prose tragedy 1638 Scipion verse tragedy 1639 Francois Hedelin abbe d Aubignac 1604 1676 La Cyminde 1642 La Pucelle d Orleans 1642 Zenobie tragedy 1647 written with the intention of affording a model in which the strict rules of the drama were served Le Martyre de Sainte Catherine tragedy 1650 Paul Scarron 1610 1660 Jodelet 1645 Don Japhel d Armenie 1653 Isaac de Benserade c 1613 1691 Cleopatre tragedy 1635 Samuel Chappuzeau 1625 1701 Le Cercle des femmes ou le Secret du Lit Nuptial 1656 Comedy prose Damon et Pythias ou le Triomphe de l Amour et de l Amitie tragi comedy 1657 Armetzar ou les Amis ennemis tragi comedy 1658 Le Riche mecontent ou le noble imaginaire Comedy 1660 L Academie des Femmes Farce in verse Paris 1661 Le Colin Maillard Farce Comedie Facetieuse Paris 1662 L Avare duppe ou l Homme de paille comedy Paris 1663 Les Eaux de Pirmont 166917th century classicism edit See also Classicism The expression classicism as it applies to literature implies notions of order clarity moral purpose and good taste Many of these notions are directly inspired by the works of Aristotle and Horace and by classical Greek and Roman masterpieces In French classical theatre also called French classicism 5 a play should follow the Three Unities Unity of place the setting should not change In practice this led to the frequent Castle interior Battles take place off stage Unity of time ideally the entire play should take place in 24 hours Unity of action there should be one central story and all secondary plots should be linked to it Although based on classical examples the unities of place and time were seen as essential for the spectator s complete absorption into the dramatic action wildly dispersed scenes in China or Africa or over many years would critics maintained break the theatrical illusion Sometimes grouped with the unity of action is the notion that no character should appear unexpectedly late in the drama Linked with the theatrical unities are the following concepts Les bienseances literature should respect moral codes and good taste nothing should be presented that flouts these codes even if they are historical events La vraisemblance actions should be believable When historical events contradict believability some critics counselled the latter The criterion of believability was sometimes also used to criticize soliloquy and in late classical plays characters are almost invariably supplied with confidents valets friends nurses to whom they reveal their emotions These rules precluded many elements common in the baroque tragi comedy flying horses chivalric battles magical trips to foreign lands and the deus ex machina The mauling of Hippolyte by a monster in Phedre could only take place offstage Finally literature and art should consciously follow Horace s precept to please and educate aut delectare aut prodesse est These rules or codes were seldom completely followed and many of the century s masterpieces broke these rules intentionally to heighten emotional effect Corneille s Le Cid was criticised for having Rodrigue appear before Chimene after having killed her father a violation of moral codes Theatre under Louis XIV edit By the 1660s classicism had finally imposed itself on French theatre The key theoretical work on theatre from this period was Francois Hedelin abbe d Aubignac s Pratique du theatre 1657 and the dictates of this work reveal to what degree French classicism was willing to modify the rules of classical tragedy to maintain the unities and decorum d Aubignac for example saw the tragedies of Oedipus and Antigone as unsuitable for the contemporary stage Although Pierre Corneille continued to produce tragedies to the end of his life the works of Jean Racine from the late 1660s on totally eclipsed the late plays of the elder dramatist Racine s tragedies inspired by Greek myths Euripides Sophocles and Seneca condensed their plot into a tight set of passionate and duty bound conflicts between a small group of noble characters and concentrated on these characters double binds and the geometry of their unfulfilled desires and hatreds Racine s poetic skill was in the representation of pathos and amorous passion like Phedre s love for her stepson and his impact was such that emotional crisis would be the dominant mode of tragedy to the end of the century Racine s two late plays Esther and Athalie opened new doors to biblical subject matter and to the use of theatre in the education of young women Tragedy in the last two decades of the century and the first years of the eighteenth century was dominated by productions of classics from Pierre Corneille and Racine but on the whole the public s enthusiasm for tragedy had greatly diminished theatrical tragedy paled beside the dark economic and demographic problems at the end of the century and the comedy of manners see below had incorporated many of the moral goals of tragedy Other later century tragedians include Claude Boyer Michel Le Clerc Jacques Pradon Jean Galbert de Campistron Jean de La Chapelle Antoine d Aubigny de la Fosse l abbe Charles Claude Geneste Prosper Jolyot de Crebillon At the end of the century in the plays of Crebillon in particular there occasionally appeared a return to the theatricality of the beginning of the century multiple episodes extravagant fear and pity and the representation of gruesome actions on the stage Early French opera was particularly popular with the royal court in this period and the composer Jean Baptiste Lully was extremely prolific see the composer s article for more on court ballets and opera in this period These musical works carried on in the tradition of tragicomedy especially the pieces a machines and court ballet and also occasionally presented tragic plots or tragedies en musique The dramatists that worked with Lully included Pierre Corneille and Moliere but the most important of these librettists was Philippe Quinault a writer of comedies tragedies and tragicomedies Comedy in the second half of the century was dominated by Moliere A veteran actor master of farce slapstick the Italian and Spanish theatre see above and regular theatre modeled on Plautus and Terence Moliere s output was large and varied He is credited with giving the French comedy of manners comedie de mœurs and the comedy of character comedie de caractere their modern form His hilarious satires of avaricious fathers precieuses social parvenues doctors and pompous literary types were extremely successful but his comedies on religious hypocrisy Tartuffe and libertinage Don Juan brought him much criticism from the church and Tartuffe was only performed through the intervention of the king Many of Moliere s comedies like Tartuffe Don Juan and the Le Misanthrope could veer between farce and the darkest of dramas and the endings of Don Juan and the Misanthrope are far from being purely comic Comedy to the end of the century would continue on the paths traced by Moliere the satire of contemporary morals and manners and the regular comedy would dominate and the last great comedy of Louis XIV s reign Alain Rene Lesage s Turcaret is an immensely dark play in which almost no character shows redeeming traits Select list of French theatre after 1659 Moliere pseudonym of Jean Baptiste Poquelin 1622 1673 Les precieuses ridicules comedy 1659 L Ecole des femmes comedy 1662 Tartuffe ou L Imposteur comedy 1664 Don Juan ou Le festin de pierre comedy 1665 Le Misanthrope comedy 1666 L Avare comedy 1668 Le Bourgeois gentilhomme comedy 1670 Les Fourberies de Scapin comedy 1671 Les Femmes savantes comedy 1672 Le Malade imaginaire comedy 1673 Thomas Corneille 1625 1709 brother of Pierre Corneille Timocrate tragedy 1659 the longest run 80 nights recorded of any play in the century Ariane tragedy 1672 Circee tragicomedy 1675 cowritten with Donneau de Vise La Devineresse comedy 1679 cowritten with Donneau de Vise Bellerophon opera 1679 Philippe Quinault 1635 1688 Alceste musical tragedy 1674 Proserpine musical tragedy 1680 Amadis de Gaule musical tragicomedy 1684 based on the Renaissance chivalric novel Armide musical tragicomedy 1686 based on Tasso s Jerusalem Delivered Jean Racine 1639 1699 Andromaque tragedy 1667 Les Plaideurs comedy 1668 Racine s only comedy Berenice tragedy 1670 Bajazet tragedy 1672 Iphigenie tragedy 1674 Phedre tragedy 1677 Britannicus tragedy 1689 Esther tragedy 1689 Athalie tragedy 1691 Jacques Pradon 1632 1698 Pyrame et Thisbe tragedy 1674 Tamerlan ou la mort de Bajazet tragedy 1676 Phedre et Hippolyte tragedy 1677 this play released at the same time as Racine s had a momentary success Jean Francois Regnard 1655 1709 Le Joueur comedy 1696 Le Distrait comedy 1697 Jean Galbert de Campistron 1656 1723 Andronic tragedy 1685 Tiridate tragedy 1691 Florent Carton Dancourt 1661 1725 Le Chevalier a la mode comedy 1687 Les Bourgeoises a la mode comedy 1693 Les Bourgeoises de qualite comedy 1700 Alain Rene Lesage 1668 1747 Turcaret comedy 1708 Prosper Jolyot de Crebillon 1674 1762 Idomenee tragedy 1705 Atree et Thyeste tragedy 1707 Electre tragedy 1709 Rhadamiste et Zenobie tragedy 1711 Xerxes tragedy 1714 Semiramis tragedy 171718th century edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2008 Further information French neoclassicism and French theatre of the late 18th century Jean Francois Regnard Voltaire Œdipe 1718 Mariamne 1724 Eryphile 1732 Zaire 1732 Mahomet 1741 Merope 1743 La princesse de Navarre 1745 Nanine 1749 L Orphelin de la Chine 1755 Marivaux Denis Diderot Beaumarchais Eugenie 1767 Les Deux amis 1770 Tarare 1787 Le Barbier de Seville ou la Precaution inutile 1775 La folle journee ou Le Mariage de Figaro 1778 L autre Tartuffe ou La Mere coupable 1792 Jean Baptiste Louis Gresset Le Mechant The philosopher Jean Jacques Rousseau in addition to writing several dramatic works also considered the theatre s relation to politics and society in his Letter to M D Alembert on Spectacles 19th century edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it July 2010 The major battle of romanticism in France was fought in the theatre but was not against the theatre The early years of the century were marked by a revival of classicism and classical inspired tragedies often with themes of national sacrifice or patriotic heroism in keeping with the spirit of the Revolution but the production of Victor Hugo s Hernani in 1830 marked the triumph of the romantic movement on the stage a description of the turbulent opening night can be found in Theophile Gautier The dramatic unities of time and place were abolished tragic and comic elements appeared together and metrical freedom was won Marked by the plays of Friedrich Schiller the romantics often chose subjects from historic periods the French Renaissance the reign of Louis XIII of France and doomed noble characters rebel princes and outlaws or misunderstood artists Vigny s play based on the life of Thomas Chatterton By the middle of the century theatre began to reflect more and more a realistic tendency associated with Naturalism These tendencies can be seen in the theatrical melodramas of the period and in an even more lurid and gruesome light in the Grand Guignol at the end of the century In addition to melodramas popular and bourgeois theatre in the mid century turned to realism in the well made bourgeois farces of Eugene Marin Labiche and the moral dramas of Emile Augier Also popular were the operettas farces and comedies of Ludovic Halevy Henri Meilhac and at the turn of the century Georges Feydeau Before the war the most successful play was Octave Mirbeau s great comedy Les affaires sont les affaires Business is business 1903 The poetry of Baudelaire and much of the literature in the latter half of the century or fin de siecle were often characterized as decadent for their lurid content or moral vision but with the publication of Jean Moreas Symbolist Manifesto in 1886 it was the term symbolism which was most often applied to the new literary environment Symbolism appeared in theatre in the works of writers Villiers de l Isle Adam and Maurice Maeterlinck among others 20th century edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it July 2010 The most significant dramatist of turn of the century France was Alfred Jarry The impact of his plays primarily Ubu Roi was writ large upon contemporary audiences and has continued to be a major influence on among others Monty Python s Flying Circus and The Young Ones Avant garde theatre in France after World War I was profoundly marked by Dada and Surrealism The Surrealist movement was a major force in experimental writing and the international art world until the Second World War and the surrealists technique was particularly well suited for poetry and theatre most notably in the theatrical works of Antonin Artaud and Guillaume Apollinaire Theatre in the 1920s and 1930s went through further changes in a loose association of theatres called the Cartel around the directors and producers Louis Jouvet Charles Dullin Gaston Baty and Ludmila and Georges Pitoeff They produced French works by Jean Giraudoux Jules Romains Jean Anouilh and Jean Paul Sartre as well as Greek and Shakespearean plays and works by Luigi Pirandello Anton Chekhov and George Bernard Shaw Inspired by the theatrical experiments in the early half of the century and by the horrors of the war the avant garde Parisian theatre New theatre termed the Theatre of the Absurd by critic Martin Esslin in reference to Eugene Ionesco Samuel Beckett Jean Genet Arthur Adamov Fernando Arrabal refused simple explanations and abandoned traditional characters plots and staging Other experiments in theatre involved decentralisation regional theatre popular theatre designed to bring the working class to the theatre Brechtian theatre largely unknown in France before 1954 and the productions of Arthur Adamov and Roger Planchon The Avignon festival was started in 1947 by Jean Vilar who was also important in the creation of the Theatre national populaire or T N P The events of May 1968 marked a watershed in the development of a radical ideology of revolutionary change in education class family and literature In theatre the conception of creation collective developed by Ariane Mnouchkine s Theatre du Soleil refused division into writers actors and producers the goal was for total collaboration for multiple points of view for an elimination of separation between actors and the public and for the audience to seek out their own truth See also editCategory French dramatists and playwrights Category French playsReferences edit Brockett Oscar 2003 History of the Theatre 9th Edition Allyn and Bacon p 188 ISBN 0 205 35878 0 Lucy Rayfield Renaissance Theatre in France Adventures on the Bookshelf January 2016 See among other works Bray Rene La formation de la doctrine classique en France Paris Hachette 1927 For an analysis of theatre development in the Renaissance see Reiss Timothy Renaissance theatre and the theory of tragedy The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism Volume III The Renaissance pp 229 247 ISBN 0 521 30008 8 Frederick Hawkins 1884 Chronology of the French Stage 789 1699 Annals of the French Stage London Chapman and Hall hdl 2027 hvd 32044095082038 via Hathi Trust Dennis J Sporre The Creative Impulse An Introduction to the Arts Prentice Hall 2000 p 414 External links edit nbsp History of Western Theatre Greeks to Elizabethans at Wikibooks nbsp History of Western Theatre 17th Century to Now at Wikibooks nbsp Learning materials related to Translating French Drama at Wikiversity Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Theatre of France amp oldid 1190833082, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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