Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Louis Émile Vanderburch

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Occupation
  
Writer, playwright

Books
  
LOVE OF A PRINCE

Born
  
30 September 1794
Paris

Died
  
30 March 1862, Rueil-Malmaison, France

Louis-Émile Vanderburch (30 September 1794 – 30 March 1862) was an 19th-century French writer and playwright. The painter Dominique Joseph Vanderburch (1722–1785) was his grandfather.

Contents

Biography

After he started a career in teaching as a professor of history, Vanderburch turned to literature and more specifically to theatre. From 1816, he authored more than a hundred theatre plays, some of which were met with great success.

From 1836 to 1853, he lived in the Petit château of La Chapelle-Saint-Mesmin (Loiret) which now houses the city hall of this town of 10,000 inhabitants.

Works

Theatre (selection)
  • 1835: Jacques II
  • 1836: Le Gamin de Paris
  • 1838: Clermont, ou Une femme d'artiste (with Eugène Scribe)
  • 1846: Une nuit au Louvre
  • 1854: Le Sanglier des Ardennes
  • 1855: Le sergent Frédéric, comédie en vaudevilles (with Dumanoir)
  • 1863: Peau d'âne
  • Other
  • 1816: L'Épingle noire
  • 1847: Scènes contemporaines laissées par Madame la Vicomtesse de Chamilly, Urbain Canel, 1828 collective pseudonym of François-Adolphe Loève-Veimars, Auguste Romieu and Vanderburch.
  • 1832: Souvenirs de France, d'Écosse et d'Angleterre pendant les règnes de François I, Henri II, François II, Marie Stuart et Elisabeth.
  • 1841-1843: Le Gamin de Paris à Alger.
  • 1851: Histoire militaire des Français. À l'usage des écoles régimentaires et des écoles communales.
  • Funds Vanderburch

    From a gift of Philippe Collin, his great-nephew, the Émile Vanderburch funds gathers at the Bibliothèque nationale de France (Department of Performing Arts) personal papers, the manuscripts of 9 unpublished plays and 8 published plays, 4 collections of poetry and songs, 3 handwritten works of his youth, intimate writings, correspondence, programs, documents related to his theatrical activity and press articles.

    References

    Louis-Émile Vanderburch Wikipedia