Hyacinthe (actor) explained

Hyacinthe
Birth Name:Louis-Hyacinthe Duflost
Birth Date:15 April 1814
Birth Place:Amiens, France
Death Place:Asnières-sur-Seine, France

Louis-Hyacinthe Duflost (15 April 1814 – 8 May 1887), known as Hyacinthe, was a French actor and operetta singer.

Life

Born in Amiens, he became a comic actor very early in life – his father was wigmaker to the magician Louis Compte, whose troupe he joined aged seven. He was part of several companies, including the Ambigu, the Vaudeville and the Variétés. In 1847 he moved to the company of the Palais-Royal, where he remained until his death and appeared very regularly in plays by Eugène Labiche.

His reputation was partly founded on his large nose, remembered by Parisians long after his death. He lived in Montmartre with his wife and children, most notably during the siege of Paris, when he joined the 32nd Battalion of the Garde Nationale aged 60. He later retired to 3 rue d'Orléans in Asnières, where he died in 1887.[1]

His main rôles

Variétés

Palais-Royal - Labiche

Palais-Royale - other authors

References

  1. « Tablettes théâtrales »,Le Matin, 10 mai 1887.

External links