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  3. A field of honor: writers, court culture and public theater in French literary life from Racine to the Revolution

A field of honor: writers, court culture and public theater in French literary life from Racine to the Revolution

Gregory S. Brown
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  • Contents

  • Reviews

  • Related Titles

  • Cover
  • Title Page
  • Copyright and Permissions
  • List of Illustrations
  • List of Web Resources
  • Preface
  • Abbreviations & Note on the Text
    • Abbreviations
    • Note on the Text
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction Gens de lettres, Literary Institutions, and Court Culture in the Age of the French Enlightenment
    • [Intro]
    • 1 Gens de lettres, the Old Regime, and the Enlightenment
    • 2 The Republic of Letters and Early Modern Institutions in Cultural Historiography
    • 3 Court Culture and Elite Self-Image Honneur and Honnêteté
    • 4 Public Theater
    • 5 Analytic Concepts for Enlightenment Literary Life
  • 1 Public Theater and Dramatic Authorship in Old Regime France, 1600-1757
    • [Intro]
    • 1.1 From Court Poet and Troupe Leader to Playwright Corneille, Racine, and Molière
    • 1.2 The Comédie Française and the Status of its Playwrights, 1680-1750
    • 1.3 Playwriting as a Strategy of Self-Fashioning Bourgeois to Tragedian to Philosophe
    • 1.4 Limits to Playwriting as a Strategy of Self-Fashioning Bourgeois to Comic Author
    • 1.5 The Failed Playwright, or the Poète Crotté Literary Figure and Social Experience
    • 1.6 A Brief Prosopography of Eighteenth-Century Playwrights
    • 1.7 Conclusion Playwriting and the Enlightenment
  • 2 Playwriting for the Comédie Française in the Eighteenth Century Règlements and the Rules of the Game
    • [Intro]
    • 2.1 The Regulations of the Comédie Française, 1680–1757
    • 2.2 Playwrights encounter the troupe The "reading"
    • 2.3 The Transfer of the Manuscript Purchase or Gift?
    • 2.4 Order of Performance The Theater Season and Authors' "Rank"
    • 2.5 The Performance of being a Playwright
    • 2.6 Fame or Fortune? "Droits d'auteur"
  • 3 "Politesse perdue" The Patriot Playwright between Court and Public
    • [Intro]
    • 3.1 Playwrights and Printed Editions
    • 3.2 Mercier, the Patriot Playwright
    • 3.3 Beaumarchais Aspiring Man of Letters
    • 3.4 Renou Representing Honor in Correspondence and in Print
    • 3.5 Lonvay A New Tribunal for Men of Letters
    • 3.6 The Cultural Politics of Playwriting at the Accession of Louis XVI
    • 3.7 Mercier and the "Tribunal of the Nation"
    • 3.8 Palissot, the unlikely Patriot; or, The Perils of Satire
    • 3.9 Lonvay Law and Print in the Service of "Letters"
    • 3.10 Du Coudray and Cailhava Journalist and Dramaturgical Theorist
    • 3.11 Rutlidge Playwright and Anti-Man of Letters
    • 3.12 Conclusion Playwrights and their Publics
  • Intermission Beaumarchais and the Société des auteurs dramatiques, 1777–1780
  • 4 Droits d'auteur and Approbation as Cultural Capital Literary Property, Censorship, and Legitimacy at the Comédie Française, 1760-1780
    • [Intro]
    • 4.1 The "Fall" of a Play Between Institutional Culture and Authorial Property
    • 4.2 Droits d'auteur Court Culture, Property, and Propriety
    • 4.3 Beaumarchais, Man of Property
    • 4.4 Old Regime droits vs. Enlightenment Property
    • 4.5 State Power and Authorial Liberty The Evolution of the Police Censor
    • 4.6 Theater Censorship in Action Belloy and Rosoy (1765), Collé and Sedaine (1774)
    • 4.7 Insiders and Outsiders Beaumarchais, Du Buisson, and Suard (1780)
    • 4.8 Reconsidering Censorship in the Age of Enlightenment
  • 5 Self-Fashioning, Civility, and the Celebrity of Gens de lettres at the End of the Enlightenment Beaumarchais and Gouges, 1781-1789
    • [Intro]
    • 5.1 "Le Mariage de Figaro," Act I Six Censors in Search of an Author
    • 5.2 "Le Mariage de Figaro," Act II Commerce, Publicity, and Cultural Capital
    • 5.3 "Le Mariage de Figaro," Act III Celebrity, Shame, and Censorship
    • 5.4 Beaumarchais, Modern Man?
    • 5.5 Olympe de Gouges, Woman of Letters
    • 5.6 Fashioning the Female Writer
    • 5.7 Self-Fashioning, Abolitionism, and Patriotism A Writer's Identity and Liberty
    • 5.8 Gouges v. Beaumarchais Paradoxical Symbols of Modernity
  • 6 From Court to Nation "Liberty of Theaters" and Patriot Playwrights, 1789-1791
    • [Intro]
    • 6.1 The Crisis of 1789 for the Comédie Française
    • 6.2 Old Writers, New Strategies Cailhava Returns
    • 6.3 Liberty and Censorship Chénier vs. Suard
    • 6.4 Liberty of Theaters before the Municipal Assembly
    • 6.5 The New Patriots The Cordeliers District and the Revolution in Literary Life
    • 6.6 Gouges in the Revolution Of Patriots, Selves, and Slaves
    • 6.7 Gouges and the Cultural Narrative of the "True Patriot"
    • 6.8 Honnêtes hommes among the Patriots Honnêtes hommesDroits d'auteur and the Rights of Man
    • 6.9 Bringing Down the Curtain on Old Regime Literary Life
  • Conclusion Vestiges of Gens de lettres, Legacies of the Enlightenment
    • [Intro]
    • 1 Gens de Lettres, the Enlightenment, and the Revolution Distinct Trajectories
    • 2 "Intellectuals" between "Engagement" and "Duplicity" Confronting the Double Bind
    • 3 Narrative and Modern Subjectivity The Power of Self-Fashioning
  • Notes
    • Preface
    • Introduction
    • 1. Public Theater and Dramatic Authorship in Old Regime France, 1600-1757
    • 2. Playwriting for the Comédie Française in the Eighteenth Century: Règlements and the Rules of the Game
    • 3. "Politesse perdue": The Patriot Playwright between Court and Public
    • Intermission: Beaumarchais and the Société des auteurs dramatiques, 1777–1780
    • 4. Droits d'auteur and Approbation as Cultural Capital: Literary Property, Censorship, and Legitimacy at the Comédie Française, 1760-1780
    • 5. Self-Fashioning, Civility, and the Celebrity of Gens de lettres at the End of the Enlightenment: Beaumarchais and Gouges, 1781-1789
    • 6. From Court to Nation: "Liberty of Theaters" and Patriot Playwrights, 1789-1791
    • Conclusion: Vestiges of Gens de lettres, Legacies of the Enlightenment
  • Glossary
    • I Theater-specific terms
    • II General period terms
    • III Early Modern Literary Institutions
    • IV Analytic Concepts
  • Bibliography
    • I Primary Source Bibliography
      • A Manuscript Sources:
      • B Printed Primary Sources:
      • C Additional Eighteenth-Century Periodicals:
    • II Secondary Sources
    • III Links
  • About the Author
  • Archival documents
    • [Intro]
    • Chapter I
      • "Anciens Règlements . . . Des Comédiens du Roi en 1697. Approuvés et Renouvelés . . . au premier avril 1726" [BCF IVa]
      • "Règlements de Nos Seigneurs les Premiers Gentilshommes de la Chambre . . . " (1719) [BCF IVa]
    • Chapter II
      • "Anciens Règlements . . . Des Comédiens du Roi en 1697. Approuvés et Renouvelés . . . au premier avril 1726" [BCF IVa]
      • "Règlements de Nos Seigneurs les Premiers Gentilshommes de la Chambre . . . " (1719) [BCF IVa]
      • "Acte de Société passé entre les Comédiens Français Ordinaires du Roi, en exécution de l'Arrêt du Conseil du 18 juin 1757, le 9 juin 1758." [BCF]
    • Chapter III
      • Letter from Mercier to Thomas, July 10, 1770. [ARS MSS 15078 II 1 B, ff. 4-8]
    • Intermission
      • "Règlement pour la Comédie Française, annexé à l'Arrêt du Conseil de l'État du Roi, du 12 Mai 1780." [AN O1 844, # 5] Chapitre 8: Pièces Nouvelles.
      • "Aux Auteurs Assemblés" [Archives familiales Beaumarchais (XI, VI, 23), 17 Août 1777]
      • Extrait des Registres du Conseil d'État du Roi, 9 décembre 1780. [BN-MSS, FF 9228. f24; AN O1 844, dossier 29]
    • Chapter IV
      • "Difficulté de fixer le taux de chute d'une pièce." [BAF: XIbis, XVI, ff. 5-12]
    • Chapter V
      • "Convention entre M. de Beaumarchais [et] M. [André] Beaussieur, 25 juin 1784." [AN-MC Étude XVI, 850]
      • Mémoires secrets pour servir à l'histoire de la république des lettres en France (Paris: 1786) 28: 225 (March 19, 1785).
      • "Que Caron de Beaumarchais," to the tune of "Que le sultan Saladin" [Reprinted in Auguste Paër, ed., Centenaire du Mariage de Figaro (Bruxelles: Gay, 1884) 123-124]
      • "Confession générale de M. de Beaumarchais" [Journal des Gens du Monde 4:76 (1785): 229-234]
      • Confession Générale d'un Homme exécuté au Caveau du Palais-Royal [NYPL-RBR: *KVR 5286]
      • Letter from Olympe de Gouges, November 27, 1788. [Cornell University, Kroch Library, French Revolution Collection; FR #4606]
    • Chapter VI
      • "Adresse aux Bons Patriotes." [Text of the printed cards distributed in the theater on October 19, 1789]
      • "Lettre de Madame de Gouges adressée à Messieurs les Colons américains," Chronique de Paris 118, p. 474 (December 19, 1789).
      • Comité du 19 juin 1790. [BCF Registre 124f, f. 59v]
      • Loi Relative aux Spectacles. Donné À Paris, le 19 janvier 1791. "Décret de l'Assemblée Nationale, du 13 janvier 1791."
      • Marie-Joseph Chénier, "Discours en vers, contre la Calomnie." [BN-MSS: NAF 6852; Manuscrits de M. J. Chenier; f. 5, 1792]
Reviews
Journal AbbreviationLabelURL
AHR 108.3 (June 2003) http://www.historycooperative.org/journals/ahr/108.3/br_143.html
HFR 3.33 (Apr. 2003) http://www.h-france.net/vol3reviews/kennedy.html
Related Titles
HEB IdTitleAuthorsPublication Information
Literary Property and Literary Sociability in France, 1775-1793. Brown, Gregory. Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing, 2006.
The Cultural Origins of the French Revolution. Chartier, Roger. Durham: Duke University Press, 1991.
The Forbidden Best-Sellers of Pre-Revolutionary France. Darnton, Robert. New York: W.W. Norton and Company, 1995.
heb00822.0001.001 The Literary Underground of the Old Regime. Darnton, Robert. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1982.
The Established and the Outsiders. Elias, Norbert. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 1994.
heb06371.0001.001 Publishing and Cultural Politics in Revolutionary Paris. Hesse, Carla. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991.
Les pouvoirs de la litterature: Histoire d'un paradoxe. Jouhaud, Christian. Gallimard, 2000.
Citable Link
Published: 2007
Publisher: Columbia University Press
ISBN(s)
  • 9780231124607 (hardcover)
  • 9780231503655 (ebook)
Series
  • Gutenberg-e
Subject
  • European: 1400-1800

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Michel Sedaine. Sedaine's prominence was sufficient already in 1772 to have Jacques-Louis David paint his portrait as Perpetual Secretary of the royal Academy of Architecture, of which an engraving by Pierre-Charles Levesque is reproduced here from BN-Éstampes, N2, vol. 1761.

Michel Sedaine. Sedaine's prominence was sufficient already in 1772 to have Jacques-Louis David paint his portrait as Perpetual Secretary of the royal Academy of Architecture, of which an engraving by Pierre-Charles Levesque is reproduced here from BN-Éstampes, N2, vol. 1761.

Michel Sedaine. Sedaine's prominence was sufficient already in 1772 to have Jacques-Louis David paint his portrait as Perpetual Secretary of the royal Academy of Architecture, of which an engraving by Pierre-Charles Levesque is reproduced here from BN-Éstampes, N2, vol. 1761.

Voltaire. This engraving commemorates the sixth performance by the Comédie Française of Voltaire's "Irène" on March 30, 1778, after which the troupe crowned a bust of the author on stage. This apotheosis of Voltaire at the royal theater culminated the writer's triumphal return to Paris just before his death. Such engravings as this one and the more frequently reproduced "Homage to Voltaire" by Moreau le jeune helped establish in the collective imagination that by the late 1770s, the Enlightenment had triumphed. Yet no other playwright of the century could imagine enjoying such acclaim from both the troupe and the audience, and most playwrights resented Voltaire for his success. This engraving is reproduced from the BN Éstampes, Collection Hennin 9644.

Voltaire. This engraving commemorates the sixth performance by the Comédie Française of Voltaire's "Irène" on March 30, 1778, after which the troupe crowned a bust of the author on stage. This apotheosis of Voltaire at the royal theater culminated the writer's triumphal return to Paris just before his death. Such engravings as this one and the more frequently reproduced "Homage to Voltaire" by Moreau le jeune helped establish in the collective imagination that by the late 1770s, the Enlightenment had triumphed. Yet no other playwright of the century could imagine enjoying such acclaim from both the troupe and the audience, and most playwrights resented Voltaire for his success. This engraving is reproduced from the BN Éstampes, Collection Hennin 9644.

Voltaire. This engraving commemorates the sixth performance by the Comédie Française of Voltaire's "Irène" on March 30, 1778, after which the troupe crowned a bust of the author on stage. This apotheosis of Voltaire at the royal theater culminated the writer's triumphal return to Paris just before his death. Such engravings as this one and the more frequently reproduced "Homage to Voltaire" by Moreau le jeune helped establish in the collective imagination that by the late 1770s, the Enlightenment had triumphed. Yet no other playwright of the century could imagine enjoying such acclaim from both the troupe and the audience, and most playwrights resented Voltaire for his success. This engraving is reproduced from the BN Éstampes, Collection Hennin 9644.

Glory and Despair. This engraving, by Isidore-Stanislas Helman from a drawing by Charles Monnet, appeared as the frontispiece to Andebez de Montgaubet's edition of his unperformed play, Abimélech (Paris: Duchesne, 1776) [Bibliothéque Nationale 8 Yth 77].

Glory and Despair. This engraving, by Isidore-Stanislas Helman from a drawing by Charles Monnet, appeared as the frontispiece to Andebez de Montgaubet's edition of his unperformed play, Abimélech (Paris: Duchesne, 1776) [Bibliothéque Nationale 8 Yth 77].

Glory and Despair. This engraving, by Isidore-Stanislas Helman from a drawing by Charles Monnet, appeared as the frontispiece to Andebez de Montgaubet's edition of his unperformed play, Abimélech (Paris: Duchesne, 1776) [Bibliothéque Nationale 8 Yth 77].

Michel Sedaine. Sedaine's prominence was sufficient already in 1772 to have Jacques-Louis David paint his portrait as Perpetual Secretary of the royal Academy of Architecture, of which an engraving by Pierre-Charles Levesque is reproduced here from BN-Éstampes, N2, vol. 1761.

Michel Sedaine. Sedaine's prominence was sufficient already in 1772 to have Jacques-Louis David paint his portrait as Perpetual Secretary of the royal Academy of Architecture, of which an engraving by Pierre-Charles Levesque is reproduced here from BN-Éstampes, N2, vol. 1761.

Michel Sedaine. Sedaine's prominence was sufficient already in 1772 to have Jacques-Louis David paint his portrait as Perpetual Secretary of the royal Academy of Architecture, of which an engraving by Pierre-Charles Levesque is reproduced here from BN-Éstampes, N2, vol. 1761.

Charles Palissot de Monteony. This engraving appeared as the frontispiece to the first edition of Palissot's Ouevres. It is based on a portrait by Charles Monnet, who held an honorary title as "Peintre du Roi;" the engraving is by Chessard, who held a similarly honorific position as "Royal Engraver" at the Spanish court. The edition itself was printed by the state publisher of Liège. It is reproduced here from the Library of Congress, Division of Special Collections, pre-1801 collection [PQ 2019 P25 1777 t. I ].

Charles Palissot de Monteony. This engraving appeared as the frontispiece to the first edition of Palissot's Ouevres. It is based on a portrait by Charles Monnet, who held an honorary title as "Peintre du Roi;" the engraving is by Chessard, who held a similarly honorific position as "Royal Engraver" at the Spanish court. The edition itself was printed by the state publisher of Liège. It is reproduced here from the Library of Congress, Division of Special Collections, pre-1801 collection [PQ 2019 P25 1777 t. I ].

Charles Palissot de Monteony. This engraving appeared as the frontispiece to the first edition of Palissot's Ouevres. It is based on a portrait by Charles Monnet, who held an honorary title as "Peintre du Roi;" the engraving is by Chessard, who held a similarly honorific position as "Royal Engraver" at the Spanish court. The edition itself was printed by the state publisher of Liège. It is reproduced here from the Library of Congress, Division of Special Collections, pre-1801 collection [PQ 2019 P25 1777 t. I ].

Louis-Sébastien Mercier. This engraving by Lorieux depicts Mercier in 1781. The attribution of the portrait to "Preudhomme" may be to Pierre-Paul Prud'hon who had recently arrived in Paris in 1781 and painted a series of portraits. It is reproduced here from the BN Éstampes, N2, vol. 1237.

Louis-Sébastien Mercier. This engraving by Lorieux depicts Mercier in 1781. The attribution of the portrait to "Preudhomme" may be to Pierre-Paul Prud'hon who had recently arrived in Paris in 1781 and painted a series of portraits. It is reproduced here from the BN Éstampes, N2, vol. 1237.

Louis-Sébastien Mercier. This engraving by Lorieux depicts Mercier in 1781. The attribution of the portrait to "Preudhomme" may be to Pierre-Paul Prud'hon who had recently arrived in Paris in 1781 and painted a series of portraits. It is reproduced here from the BN Éstampes, N2, vol. 1237.

Pierre Corneille. This engraving is based on a Charles Le Brun portrait, engraved in 1734 by Etienne Ficquet, reproduced here from Portraits engravés par Etienne Ficquet, 1738 a 1794 [Paris: 1738-1794]) [courtesy of the Library of Congress, Division of Special Collections, Rosenwald Collection (#1649)].

Pierre Corneille. This engraving is based on a Charles Le Brun portrait, engraved in 1734 by Etienne Ficquet, reproduced here from Portraits engravés par Etienne Ficquet, 1738 a 1794 [Paris: 1738-1794]) [courtesy of the Library of Congress, Division of Special Collections, Rosenwald Collection (#1649)].

Pierre Corneille. This engraving is based on a Charles Le Brun portrait, engraved in 1734 by Etienne Ficquet, reproduced here from Portraits engravés par Etienne Ficquet, 1738 a 1794 [Paris: 1738-1794]) [courtesy of the Library of Congress, Division of Special Collections, Rosenwald Collection (#1649)].

heb99001.0022-lg.jpg

Louis-Sébastien Mercier. Ane comme il y en a peu," BN Estampes, N2, vol. 1235. The BN catalogue dates this image to "1798 [?]" though all the references are to early Mercier writings, suggesting it was at least drawn if not engraved in the early 1770s. In addition to the references to Du Théâtre and his early plays, the title refers to Mercier's Contes moraux, ou les hommes comme il'y en a peu (Paris: 1768). In the background, a windmill alludes to Holland where many of Mercier's early tracts and plays had been printed by Harrevelt. The legend reads "Masterpieces mean little to me, so long as I can trample and raise up, and that I have enough thistle [Peu m'importent les chef-d'oeuvres de tous les arts, pourvu que j'écrase, que je m'élève et que le chardon ne me manque pas]." Beneath that, it reads: "Oh, men of taste, recognize the beast! [Ô! Gens de goût, reconnaissez la bête!]"

Louis-Sébastien Mercier. Ane comme il y en a peu," BN Estampes, N2, vol. 1235. The BN catalogue dates this image to "1798 [?]" though all the references are to early Mercier writings, suggesting it was at least drawn if not engraved in the early 1770s. In addition to the references to Du Théâtre and his early plays, the title refers to Mercier's Contes moraux, ou les hommes comme il'y en a peu (Paris: 1768). In the background, a windmill alludes to Holland where many of Mercier's early tracts and plays had been printed by Harrevelt. The legend reads "Masterpieces mean little to me, so long as I can trample and raise up, and that I have enough thistle [Peu m'importent les chef-d'oeuvres de tous les arts, pourvu que j'écrase, que je m'élève et que le chardon ne me manque pas]." Beneath that, it reads: "Oh, men of taste, recognize the beast! [Ô! Gens de goût, reconnaissez la bête!]"

Louis-Sébastien Mercier. Ane comme il y en a peu," BN Estampes, N2, vol. 1235. The BN catalogue dates this image to "1798 [?]" though all the references are to early Mercier writings, suggesting it was at least drawn if not engraved in the early 1770s. In addition to the references to Du Théâtre and his early plays, the title refers to Mercier's Contes moraux, ou les hommes comme il'y en a peu (Paris: 1768). In the background, a windmill alludes to Holland where many of Mercier's early tracts and plays had been printed by Harrevelt. The legend reads "Masterpieces mean little to me, so long as I can trample and raise up, and that I have enough thistle [Peu m'importent les chef-d'oeuvres de tous les arts, pourvu que j'écrase, que je m'élève et que le chardon ne me manque pas]." Beneath that, it reads: "Oh, men of taste, recognize the beast! [Ô! Gens de goût, reconnaissez la bête!]"

Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais. This image of Beaumarchais in the style of an academic portrait was engraved by Michon in 1784, as a potential frontispiece for the anticipated, luxury first edition of Beaumarchais's Mariage de Figaro. It is based on an engraving cut in 1773 by Augustin de St. Aubin, from a portrait drawn by Nicholas Cochin, as a frontispiece for his Mémoires contre Goezmann. This image is reproduced from the BN Éstampes, N2, vol 125.

Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais. This image of Beaumarchais in the style of an academic portrait was engraved by Michon in 1784, as a potential frontispiece for the anticipated, luxury first edition of Beaumarchais's Mariage de Figaro. It is based on an engraving cut in 1773 by Augustin de St. Aubin, from a portrait drawn by Nicholas Cochin, as a frontispiece for his Mémoires contre Goezmann. This image is reproduced from the BN Éstampes, N2, vol 125.

Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais. This image of Beaumarchais in the style of an academic portrait was engraved by Michon in 1784, as a potential frontispiece for the anticipated, luxury first edition of Beaumarchais's Mariage de Figaro. It is based on an engraving cut in 1773 by Augustin de St. Aubin, from a portrait drawn by Nicholas Cochin, as a frontispiece for his Mémoires contre Goezmann. This image is reproduced from the BN Éstampes, N2, vol 125.

Alexis Piron. This engraving by Nicolas Le Mir appeared as the frontispiece to Piron, Oeuvres choisies (Paris: Duchesne, 1773); it based on a painting by Nicolas Bernard Michel Lépicié, to which the engraver added a verse praising Piron's "brain" as the source of his "glory." It is reproduced here from the Library of Congress, Division of Special Collections [PQ2019.P6 A17].

Alexis Piron. This engraving by Nicolas Le Mir appeared as the frontispiece to Piron, Oeuvres choisies (Paris: Duchesne, 1773); it based on a painting by Nicolas Bernard Michel Lépicié, to which the engraver added a verse praising Piron's "brain" as the source of his "glory." It is reproduced here from the Library of Congress, Division of Special Collections [PQ2019.P6 A17].

Alexis Piron. This engraving by Nicolas Le Mir appeared as the frontispiece to Piron, Oeuvres choisies (Paris: Duchesne, 1773); it based on a painting by Nicolas Bernard Michel Lépicié, to which the engraver added a verse praising Piron's "brain" as the source of his "glory." It is reproduced here from the Library of Congress, Division of Special Collections [PQ2019.P6 A17].

Comédie Française at Odéon. The theater at the Place de l'Odéon, built to house the Comédie Française, opened in 1783. The new hall held about 200 more spectators than the Thuileries theater, where the royal actors had preformed for most of the century; more importantly, considerably more of the seats were in loges. This hand-colored engraving, by Jean-François Janninet from a drawing by Jean-Nicolas Louis Durand from the 1780s, is reproduced here from the BCF.

Comédie Française at Odéon. The theater at the Place de l'Odéon, built to house the Comédie Française, opened in 1783. The new hall held about 200 more spectators than the Thuileries theater, where the royal actors had preformed for most of the century; more importantly, considerably more of the seats were in loges. This hand-colored engraving, by Jean-François Janninet from a drawing by Jean-Nicolas Louis Durand from the 1780s, is reproduced here from the BCF.

Comédie Française at Odéon. The theater at the Place de l'Odéon, built to house the Comédie Française, opened in 1783. The new hall held about 200 more spectators than the Thuileries theater, where the royal actors had preformed for most of the century; more importantly, considerably more of the seats were in loges. This hand-colored engraving, by Jean-François Janninet from a drawing by Jean-Nicolas Louis Durand from the 1780s, is reproduced here from the BCF.

Charles Palissot de Monteony. This engraving appeared as the frontispiece to the first edition of Palissot's Ouevres. It is based on a portrait by Charles Monnet, who held an honorary title as "Peintre du Roi;" the engraving is by Chessard, who held a similarly honorific position as "Royal Engraver" at the Spanish court. The edition itself was printed by the state publisher of Liège. It is reproduced here from the Library of Congress, Division of Special Collections, pre-1801 collection [PQ 2019 P25 1777 t. I ].

Charles Palissot de Monteony. This engraving appeared as the frontispiece to the first edition of Palissot's Ouevres. It is based on a portrait by Charles Monnet, who held an honorary title as "Peintre du Roi;" the engraving is by Chessard, who held a similarly honorific position as "Royal Engraver" at the Spanish court. The edition itself was printed by the state publisher of Liège. It is reproduced here from the Library of Congress, Division of Special Collections, pre-1801 collection [PQ 2019 P25 1777 t. I ].

Charles Palissot de Monteony. This engraving appeared as the frontispiece to the first edition of Palissot's Ouevres. It is based on a portrait by Charles Monnet, who held an honorary title as "Peintre du Roi;" the engraving is by Chessard, who held a similarly honorific position as "Royal Engraver" at the Spanish court. The edition itself was printed by the state publisher of Liège. It is reproduced here from the Library of Congress, Division of Special Collections, pre-1801 collection [PQ 2019 P25 1777 t. I ].

Maison des Ambassadeurs d'Hollande, Paris. Photograph by the author, 2001.

Maison des Ambassadeurs d'Hollande, Paris. Photograph by the author, 2001.

Maison des Ambassadeurs d'Hollande, Paris. Photograph by the author, 2001.

Frontispiece. This engraving is the frontispiece of an early nineteenth-century edition, Oeuvres de M. Molière (Paris: Allaut, 1821), derived from the Coypel portrait. It appears courtesy of Butler Library, Columbia University [843 M73 I122, v. 1].

Frontispiece. This engraving is the frontispiece of an early nineteenth-century edition, Oeuvres de M. Molière (Paris: Allaut, 1821), derived from the Coypel portrait. It appears courtesy of Butler Library, Columbia University [843 M73 I122, v. 1].

Frontispiece. This engraving is the frontispiece of an early nineteenth-century edition, Oeuvres de M. Molière (Paris: Allaut, 1821), derived from the Coypel portrait. It appears courtesy of Butler Library, Columbia University [843 M73 I122, v. 1].

Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais. This image of Beaumarchais in the style of an academic portrait was engraved by Michon in 1784, as a potential frontispiece for the anticipated, luxury first edition of Beaumarchais's Mariage de Figaro. It is based on an engraving cut in 1773 by Augustin de St. Aubin, from a portrait drawn by Nicholas Cochin, as a frontispiece for his Mémoires contre Goezmann. This image is reproduced from the BN Éstampes, N2, vol 125.

Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais. This image of Beaumarchais in the style of an academic portrait was engraved by Michon in 1784, as a potential frontispiece for the anticipated, luxury first edition of Beaumarchais's Mariage de Figaro. It is based on an engraving cut in 1773 by Augustin de St. Aubin, from a portrait drawn by Nicholas Cochin, as a frontispiece for his Mémoires contre Goezmann. This image is reproduced from the BN Éstampes, N2, vol 125.

Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais. This image of Beaumarchais in the style of an academic portrait was engraved by Michon in 1784, as a potential frontispiece for the anticipated, luxury first edition of Beaumarchais's Mariage de Figaro. It is based on an engraving cut in 1773 by Augustin de St. Aubin, from a portrait drawn by Nicholas Cochin, as a frontispiece for his Mémoires contre Goezmann. This image is reproduced from the BN Éstampes, N2, vol 125.

Glory and Despair. This engraving, by Isidore-Stanislas Helman from a drawing by Charles Monnet, appeared as the frontispiece to Andebez de Montgaubet's edition of his unperformed play, Abimélech (Paris: Duchesne, 1776) [Bibliothéque Nationale 8 Yth 77].

Glory and Despair. This engraving, by Isidore-Stanislas Helman from a drawing by Charles Monnet, appeared as the frontispiece to Andebez de Montgaubet's edition of his unperformed play, Abimélech (Paris: Duchesne, 1776) [Bibliothéque Nationale 8 Yth 77].

Glory and Despair. This engraving, by Isidore-Stanislas Helman from a drawing by Charles Monnet, appeared as the frontispiece to Andebez de Montgaubet's edition of his unperformed play, Abimélech (Paris: Duchesne, 1776) [Bibliothéque Nationale 8 Yth 77].

© Photothèque des Musées de la Ville de Paris/Ladet

© Photothèque des Musées de la Ville de Paris/Ladet

Voltaire. This image, "Voltaire à 24 ans," appears courtesy of the Musée Carnavalet (P 208). This painting may be a studio copy of a similar portrait in the Musée nationale de Versailles from the same year, which has been attributed to a different court painter, Catherine Luscurier. This portrait was reproduced in multiple engravings, all of which attribute the original to Largillière. © Photothèque des Musées de la Ville de Paris/Ladet

Poster from Comédie Française. The poster shown here is one of a small collection of 12 eighteenth-century posters is held at the BCF.

Poster from Comédie Française. The poster shown here is one of a small collection of 12 eighteenth-century posters is held at the BCF.

Poster from Comédie Française. The poster shown here is one of a small collection of 12 eighteenth-century posters is held at the BCF.

Jean-François de Cailhava. This engraving from 1780, by Charles-Étienne Gaucher, noted for his portraits of court figures, is based on a drawing by André Pujos. It presents Cailhava in a standard academic pose; the verse compares him to Molière for his ability to combine "tone" and "mores" with commercial appeal. (Reproduced from the Bibliothèque Nationale, Département des Estampes, N2, vol. 248)

Jean-François de Cailhava. This engraving from 1780, by Charles-Étienne Gaucher, noted for his portraits of court figures, is based on a drawing by André Pujos. It presents Cailhava in a standard academic pose; the verse compares him to Molière for his ability to combine "tone" and "mores" with commercial appeal. (Reproduced from the Bibliothèque Nationale, Département des Estampes, N2, vol. 248)

Jean-François de Cailhava. This engraving from 1780, by Charles-Étienne Gaucher, noted for his portraits of court figures, is based on a drawing by André Pujos. It presents Cailhava in a standard academic pose; the verse compares him to Molière for his ability to combine "tone" and "mores" with commercial appeal. (Reproduced from the Bibliothèque Nationale, Département des Estampes, N2, vol. 248)

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