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Mademoiselle Mars

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Nationality
  
French

Children
  
Louise Bronner

Role
  
Author

Name
  
Mademoiselle Mars

Other names
  
Mademoiselle Mars


Mademoiselle Mars httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
9 February 1779 (
1779-02-09
)
Paris

Died
  
March 20, 1847, Paris, France

Parents
  
Jacques Marie Boutet, Madame Mars

Mademoiselle Mars, (Anne Françoise Hyppolyte Boutet Salvetat) (9 February 1779 – 20 March 1847), French actress, was born in Paris, the natural daughter of the actor-author named Monvel (Jacques Marie Boutet) (1745–1812) and Jeanne-Marie Salvetat (1748–1838), an actress known as Madame Mars, whose southern accent had made her Paris debut a failure.

Mademoiselle Mars Mademoiselle Mars Wikipedia

Life

Mademoiselle Mars FileMademoiselle Mars or Anne Boutet by Aime Perletjpg

Mlle Mars began her stage career in children's parts, and by 1799, after the rehabilitation of the Comédie-Française, she and her elder half-sister (Marie-Louise-Geneviève Salvetat, called Louise and known professionally as Mlle Mars aînée) joined that company, of which she remained an active member for 33 years. Her beauty and talents soon placed her at the top of her profession.

Mademoiselle Mars FileMademoiselle Marsjpg Wikimedia Commons

She was incomparable in ingenue parts, and equally charming as the coquette. Molière, Marivaux, Michel-Jean Sedaine, and Pierre Beaumarchais had no more accomplished interpreter, and in her career of half a century, besides many comedy roles of the older repertoire, she created fully a hundred parts in plays which owed success largely to her. She also helped educate foreign actors, among them the Swedish actors Charlotta Eriksson and Emilie Högquist. For her farewell performance she selected Elmire in Tartuffe, and Silvia in Jeu de l'amour et du hasard, two of her most popular roles; and for her benefit, a few days after, Climène in Le Misanthrope and Araminthe in Les Femmes savantes.

Mademoiselle Mars Mademoiselle Mars actrice morte davoir voulu rester belle

By her liaison with a Swiss-born French soldier, Nicolas Bronner (1773–1816), she had three children: a son, who died at birth; Louis-Alphonse (born 14 March 1799), and a daughter, Hippolyte (1800-31 March 1820).

Mademoiselle Mars retired following 1841 and died in Paris on 20 March 1847. She and her children are buried in Pere Lachaise cemetery; sharing the tomb is the body of her niece, an actress known as Georgina Mars (died 1821).

References

Mademoiselle Mars Wikipedia


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