François Bernard-Valville Explained
François Bernard-Valville |
Birth Name: | François Marcellin Bernard-Valville |
Birth Date: | 6 February 1767 |
Occupation: | Playwright librettist |
François Marcellin Bernard-Valville (6 February 1767 – 15 October 1828) was a French playwright and librettist.
Biography
The son of a lawyer of Clermont, his studies led him to theater, where he played a few years under the name Bernard-Valville, before trying to playwriting with some success. Arrived in Paris in 1795, he presented his plays in several Parisian theaters. But the career of arms attracted him: he accompanied General Decaen to Pondicherry and Mauritius Island when the latter became governor, and continued his career in France until the collapse of the Empire.[1] The cloudy period following the Hundred Days encouraged him to return to Mauritius where he was appointed deputy headmaster of the Royal College in Port-Louis, where he also taught rhetoric. He would return to Paris only to die there.[2]
Jacques Bernard, also a military (captain of hussards) and poet died in 1842, was his twin brother.
His plays were presented on the most important Parisian stages of his time including the Théâtre de la Gaîté and the Théâtre Feydeau.
Works
- 1794: Les Deux perruques, comédie nouvelle in one act and in verse
- c.1795: Le Miguelet, one-act opera
- 1799: Les Deux tableaux parlans ou le Dîner interrompu, one-act comedy in prose
- 1799: L'Horloge de bois, ou Un Trait d'humanité, one-act comedy, mingled with vaudevilles
- 1799: L'Épicière bel-esprit, one-act comedy, in prose, with Étienne Gosse
- 1799: La Lanterne magique, ou le Retour des époux, one-act comedy
- 1799: Marcelin, one-act opera, in prose
- 1799: Le Petit Gagne-Petit, ou l'Erreur d'une mère, one-act comey, in prose, mingled with vaudevilles
- 1799: Pygmalion à Saint-Maur, one-act farce-anecdotique and vaudevilles, with Étienne Crétu and Gosse
- 1800: Augustine et Benjamin, ou le Sargines de village, one-act opéra comique, with Eugène Hus
- 1800: Kiki, ou l'Île imaginaire, three-act comedie-folie, in prose, with Hus
- 1800: Le trompeur trompé, one-act opéra comique, in prose, with Pierre Gaveaux
- 1801: Vert-Vert, ou le Perroquet de Nevers, one-act opéra comique, in prose
- 1810: Henriette et Adhémar, ou, La bataille de Fontenoy, with Louis-Charles Caigniez, three-act melodrama, in prose
- 1820: Épître à mon frère, en réponse à la sienne
- 1822: Le Dépit amoureux, comédie de Molière, remise in two acts by Bernard-Valville
Bibliography
- Joseph Marie Quérard, La France littéraire ou dictionnaire bibliographique des savants..., 1839, (p. 34)
- Joann Elart, Catalogue des fonds musicaux conservés en Haute-Normandie, 2004, (p. 217)
Notes and References
- Book: fr. Quérard, Joseph-Marie. La littérature française contemporaine: XIXe siècle. Paris, Daguin frères. 1842.
- The collected works of Sir Humphry Davy, 1856, (p. 814-815)