MOLIÈRE, JEAN BAPTISTE POQUELIN

zhäN bätēstˈ pôklăNˈ môlyĕrˈ, 1622–73, French playwright and actor, b. Paris; son of a merchant who was upholsterer to the king. His name was originally Jean Baptiste Poquelin. Molière was the creator of French high comedy; his genius lay in exposing the hypocrisies and follies of his society through satire.

Life

In his youth Moliére joined the Béjart troupe of professional actors. Madeleine Béjart was for years his mistress, but in 1662 he scandalized many by marrying Armande Béjart, who was either Madeleine's younger sister or her daughter. The little company, headed by Molière and called the Illustre Théâtre, settled (1643) in Paris, but their venture failed (1645), and they spent the next 13 years touring the provinces. They returned in triumph with a performance of Molière's Le Docteur amoureux for Louis XIV. Under royal patronage this troupe, performing at the Palais Royal, enjoyed continuous success; it is known as the ancestor of the Comédie Française. Molière had, nevertheless, to contend with rivalry from the Hôtel de Bourgogne and with cries of impiety and slander from critics and other authors.

The Plays

The great variety in Molière's work stems from his being at once actor, director, stage manager, and writer. Influenced by the commedia dell'arte, he wrote farces, comedies, masks, and ballets on short notice for the entertainment of the court. He is best known for the great comedies of character in which he ridicules a vice or a type of excess by caricaturing a person who is its incarnation: Le Tartuffe (1664), on the religious hypocrite; Le Misanthrope (1666), on the antisocial man; L'Avare (1668, tr. The Miser); and Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme (1670, tr. The Would-Be Gentleman), on the parvenu.

Other plays in which vices are personified are Les Femmes savantes (1672, tr. The Learned Women), on the fashionable, affected intellectuals whom he had already lampooned in Les Précieuses ridicules (1659), often called the first comedy of manners and Le Malade imaginaire (1673), on the hypochondriac. Molière was acting the title role of the latter when he was fatally stricken. Also comedies of character, but depending more on absurdities, are L'École des maris (1661, tr. The School for Husbands) and L'École des femmes (1662, tr. The School for Wives), which was followed by a skit against the critics, La Critique de l'École des femmes (1663); and Don Juan (1665), an adaptation of the old story of the libertine.

The playwright's farces are uproarious—Sganarelle (1660), Le Médecin malgré lui (1666, tr. The Doctor in Spite of Himself), George Dandin (1668), Monsieur de Pourceaugnac (1669), Les Fourberies de Scapin (1671, tr. Scapin, the Trickster), and La Comtesse d'Escarbagnas (1671). Among Molière's other works are the poetic Amphitryon (1668), after Plautus; L'Étourdi (1653?, tr. The Blunderer); Le Dépit amoureux (1656, tr. The Amorous Quarrel); and Le Mariage forcé (1664, tr. The Forced Marriage).

Bibliography

A primary source on Molière's career is the careful Registre or daybook of programs, expenditures, and receipts of the Paris company from 1658. It was kept by the actor Charles Varlet de la Grange (1639?—1692).

See also biographies by H. M. Trollope (1905), D. B. W. Lewis (1959), J. Palmer (2d ed. 1965), and V. Scott (2001); studies by P. A. Chapman (1941, repr. 1965), L. Gossman (1969), R. Fernandez (1929, repr. 1980), N. Gross (1982), and H. C. Knutson (1987).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: MoliEre Jean Baptiste Poquelin  - 395 results

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...the criticism of Jean Fleury, Marivaax...of comicality of Molieres play and satisfies...well-known themes of Moliere. Monsieur Argante...when Eraste and ,Jean Foumier and Maurice...Marivauxs choice. Jean Floury remarked...the theater of Moliere, he did not mention...
Shuzo Kuki and Jean-Paul Sartre INFLUENCE AND COUNTER...Light, Stephen, date Shuzo Kuki and Jean-Paul Sartre: influence and counter-influence...1. Kuki, Shuzo, 1888-1941. 2. Sartre, Jean Paul, 1905- 3. Existential phenomenology...
JEAN-PHILIPPE RAMEAU By the same author DREAMER AND STRIVER: the poetry of Frederic Mistral MOZARTS PIANO CONCERTOS JEAN-PHILIPPE RAMEAU from Dagotys Galerie Franfaise 1770 Jean-Philippe RAMEAU His Life and work BY Cuthbert Girdlestone With frontispiece...
Jean Cocteau Jean COCTEAU A Biography by Margaret Crosland New York 1956 Alfred...Index follows page 238 Illustrations Jean Cocteau Frontispiece Photograph by Jane Bown Raymond...
...these and other epidemic diseases that both Fracastoro and Jean Fernel entered this debate. It is beyond all doubt that...confession of ignorance (the posi- tion later satirised bv Moliere when he made a doctor in one of his plays pompously intone...
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journal articles on: MoliEre Jean Baptiste Poquelin  - 2 results

 
 
...Analysts. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press. Moliere, Jean Baptiste Poquelin. 1998. Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme. Montreal: XYZ Publishing...Maker. New York: Cambridge University Press. Piaget, Jean. 1953. Logic and Psychology. Manchester, UK: Manchester...
...appropriate, by "Apte." (46.) Jean Baptiste Poquelin de Moliere, The Misanthrope and Tartuffe...301. (47.) Larry W. Riggs, "Molieres `Poststructuralism: Demolition...Richard Wilbur, "Introduction," in Moliere, 161. (49.) Bergson, 147...


 

magazine articles on: MoliEre Jean Baptiste Poquelin  - 2 results

 
 
...not revenge? Another dramatist of a slightly later time merits mention here. It took great courage for Moliere (Jean Baptiste Poquelin) to enrage his protector, King Louis XIV of France, by writing and producing his play Tartuffe in 1664. In...
...twist that recalls Jean-Baptiste Poquelin Molieres heroic resolve...is directed by Jean-Pierre Miquel...administrator, the Moliere by his predecessor...Louis Jouvet and Jean Vilar offered...time (much as Moliere himself objected...


 

newspaper articles on: MoliEre Jean Baptiste Poquelin  - 7 results

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...remains one of the few foreign playwrights whose works are regularly staged. The playwright now known as Moliere was born Jean Baptiste Poquelin on Jan. 15, 1622, in Paris. Beyond that, details of his life are often a matter of conjecture. Like William...
...setting his comedy in a period of Molieres life about which we know almost nothing. In 1645, a twentysomething Jean-Baptiste Poquelin, as the dramatist was then known...French comedy. In this telling, Moliere (Romain Duris, "The Beat That...
...return to Paris," declares the opening title card. Jean-Baptiste Poquelin aka Moliere (Duris) and his actors arrive in the capital in...delicious farces. The jubilation is short-lived when Moliere is summoned to the bedchamber of a dying woman...
...I have seen it twice and will go again now the show has been extended for a week and I would encourage anyone too. It is a triumph and a marriage of Molieres French 17th-century tale and McGoughs Scouse humour. Jean-Baptiste Poquelin, West Kirby
...constant play on words and hilarious jibes at the complexities of human relationships." Born Jean-Baptiste Poquelin, the son of a Parisianmerchant in 1622, Moliere also wrote the classic religious satire Le Tartuffe. He died after being taken ill during...
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encyclopedia articles on: MoliEre Jean Baptiste Poquelin  - 1 result

 
 
MOLIERE, JEAN BAPTISTE POQUELIN zhaN batest poklaN molyer...the king. His name was originally Jean Baptiste Poquelin. Moliere was the creator of French high...satire. Life In his youth Moliere joined the Bejart troupe of professional...


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