Jules Arsène Arnaud Claretie

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Portrait by Carolus-Duran, 1874

Jules Arsène Arnaud Claretie (3 December 1840 – 23 December 1913) was a French literary figure and director of the Théâtre Français.

Biography

Jules Claretie in 1909

He was born at Limoges. After studying at the lycée Bonaparte in Paris, he became a journalist, achieving great success as dramatic critic to Le Figaro and to the Opinion nationale. He was a newspaper correspondent during the Franco-Prussian War, and during the Paris Commune acted as staff-officer in the National Guard. In 1885 he became director of the Théâtre Français, and from that time devoted his time chiefly to its administration until his death. During the battle for Octave Mirbeau's comedy Les affaires sont les affaires (Business is business), the Comité de Lecture is abolished, in October 1901, and Jules Claretie becomes the only responsible for choosing the modern plays to be performed.

He was elected a member of the Académie française in 1888, and took his seat in February 1889, being received by Ernest Renan.

Works

The long list of his works includes:

  • Histoire de la révolution de 1870-1871 (5 vols., 1875-1876)
  • Cinq ans après: l'Alsace et la Lorraine depuis l'annexion (1876)
  • Some annual volumes of reprints of his articles in the weekly press, entitled La Vie à Paris; La Vie moderne au théâtre (1868-1869)
  • Molière, sa vie et son œuvre (1871)
  • Les Prussiens chez eux" (1875)
  • Histoire de la littérature française (2nd ed. 1905)
  • Candidat (1887), a novel of contemporary life
  • Brichanteau, comédien français (1896)

Several plays, some of which are based on novels of his own:

  • Les muscadins (1874)
  • Le régiment de Champagne (1877)
  • Les Mirabeau (1879)
  • Monsieur le ministre (1883), and others

Claretie also wrote three operas for the music of Jules Massenet; La Navarraise (1894), based on his novel La cigarette and written with Henri Cain, Thérèse (1907), and Amadis (1922), a work begun by Massenet in 1895, but shelved and finished in the last years of his life and premiered posthumously.

Works in English translation

  • Camille Desmoulins and His Wife (1876)
  • Monsieur le Ministre: A Romance in Real Life (1882)
  • "Boum-Boum." In: Short Stories, Vol. VII (1891; translated by Mary Stuart Symonds)
  • "A Marriage Failure." In: Short Stories, Vol. VIII (1891; translated by E.C. Waggener)
  • The Crime of the Boulevard (1896)
  • Brichanteau: Actor (1897)
  • Vicomte de Puyjoli: A Romance of the French Revolution (1899)
  • Prince Zilah (1905)
  • "I and the Other." In: Transatlantic Tales, Vol. XXX (1906)
  • Which Is My Husband? (1911)
  • Obsession [L'Obsession (Moi et l'Autre), 1908] translated by Brian Stableford, Black Coat Press (2013) ISBN 9781612272139

See also

References

  • Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainLua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

Further reading

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Topin, Marius (1876). Romanciers contemporains. Paris: Charpentier.

External links