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Félix Auguste Duvert

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Occupation
  
Playwright

Félix-Auguste Duvert httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Full Name
  
Félix-Auguste Adolphe Duvert

Born
  
12 January 1795
Paris

Died
  
19 October 1876, Paris, France

Similar
  
Augustin‑Théodore de Lauzann, Étienne Arago, X B Saintine

Félix-Auguste Duvert (12 January 1795 – 19 October 1876) was an 19th-century French playwright and vaudevillist.

Contents

Biography

Félix-Auguste Duvert was first a soldier. A volunteer in 1811 among the riflemen of the young guard, he then was part of a regiment of dragoons that he left only after the dismissal of the Armée de la Loire.

In 1823, he made his debut as a playwright at the Théâtre du Gymnase dramatique with Les Frères de lait, a one-act comédie en vaudeville cowritten with Édouard Nicole. He would afterwards collaborate primarily with Paul Duport, Saintine, Étienne Arago, Charles Dupeuty and Charles Varin. But from 1830, his name was inseparably linked to that of his son in law, Augustin de Lauzanne. The latter's share in the development of their works was the backbone of the plot, the outlining of the characters and imagination of the quiproquos. The duo would produce a very great number of successful "follies" for over forty years.

Duvert also wrote the lyrics of many songs. He is buried at Père Lachaise Cemetery (54th division).

Other

  • 1830 : Les Havrais, cantate adressée aux habitans du Havre, paroles de Duvert
  • 1830 : La Parisienne, chant national d’É. Arago, Duvert et Varin, « au profit des blessés et des familles des citoyens morts en combattant pour la liberté les 27, 28 et 29 juillet »
  • References

    Félix-Auguste Duvert Wikipedia