Abbé de La Marre

French choreographer and librettist

The abbé de La Marre (or La Mare) (Quimper, 1708 – Bavaria, 1742) was an 18th-century French homme de lettres.[1] Voltaire was interested in him and gave him some literary works to do. He was a member of the Société du bout du banc hosted by Mlle Quinault.

Works

  • 1736: L'Ennui d'un quart d'heure
  • 1736: Remarks on La Mort de César by Voltaire
  • 1739: Le Je ne sais quoi de vingt minutes, poems
  • 1739: Zaïde, reine de Grenade, ballet héroïque, music by Joseph Nicolas Pancrace Royer, given at the Académie royale de musique on 3 September
  • 1739: Momus amoureux, one-act ballet, presented on 27 October
  • 1753: With Antoine Houdar de La Motte, argument de Titon et l'Aurore, pastorale héroïque, libretto by Claude-Henri de Fusée de Voisenon, music by Jean-Joseph Cassanéa de Mondonville, premiered at the Académie royale de musique on 9 January
  • 1766: Les Quarts d'heure d'un joyeux solitaire, (attr. ; reimp. 1882 under the title Contes de l'abbé de La Marre, les Quarts d'heure d'un joyeux solitaire)

Bibliography

  • Cardinal Georges Grente (dir.), Dictionnaire des lettres françaises. Le XVIIIe siècle, nlle. édition revue et mise à jour sous la direction de François Moureau, Paris, Fayard, 1995.

References

  1. ^ Antoine de Léris says he committed suicide in 1746 at Cheb in Bohemia (Dictionnaire des théâtres, 1763, p. 608).

External links

  • Abbé de La Marre on data.bnf.fr
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
International
  • ISNI
  • VIAF
National
  • France
  • BnF data
  • Germany
  • Belgium
Artists
  • MusicBrainz
Other
  • IdRef