Jules Noriac
Jules Noriac | |
---|---|
Born | Claude, Antoine, Jules Cairon 24 April 1827 |
Died | 1 October 1882 Paris | (aged 55)
Occupation | Journalist, playwright, writer, librettist and theatre director. |
Jules Noriac, real name Claude, Antoine, Jules Cairon, (24 April 1827 – 1 October 1882), was a French journalist, playwright, writer, librettist and theatre director.
Biography[]
Cairon was first a journalist and columnist in many newspapers. He started successively at the Corsair in 1850, the Gazette de France in 1851, the National Assembly in 1853, then as editor of Le Figaro weekly of which he was one of the main editors. He worked simultaneously with the Revue fantaisiste, the Gazette de Paris, La Silhouette, the Revue des Beaux Arts, L'Univers illustré and became successively chief-editor of the Figaro-programme, the Soleil and the (1865–66).
He also wrote plays, operetta libretti and novels under the pseudonym Jules Noriac.
He was co-managing director of the Théâtre des Variétés from 1856 to 1869 and of the Théâtre des Bouffes-Parisiens from 1868 to 1879.
Jules Noriac was awarded with the Spanish Order of Charles III.
Works[]
- Tales
- 1870: Histoire du siège de Paris
- Les Gens de Paris
- Dictionnaire des amoureux
- Novels and short stories
- 1859: Le 101 Régiment
- 1860: La Bêtise humaine
- 1861: Le Grain de sable
- 1863: Les Mémoires d'un baiser
- 1863: La Dame à la plume noire
- 1865: Le Journal d'un flâneur
- 1866: Le Capitaine Sauvage
- Le Chevalier de Cerny
- La Comtesse de Bruges
- La Falaise d'Houlgate
- Mademoiselle Poucet
- Sur le rail
- 1862: La Boîte au lait
- 1873: Le Mouton enragé
- 1876: La Maison verte
- Operettas
- 1870: Les Baisers d'alentour, Théâtre des Bouffes Parisiens
- 1871: Le Barbier de Trouville, music by Charles Lecocq
- 1872: la Timbale d'argent, 3 acts, with Eugène Grangé, music by Léon Vasseur, Bouffes Parisiens
- 1873: la Petite Reine, 3 acts, with Jaime, music by Vasseur, Bouffes Parisiens
- 1875: la Branche cassée, 3 acts, with Jules Moinaux, music by Vasseur, Théâtre Taitbout
- 1876: , operetta in 4 acts, music by Offenbach, Bouffes Parisiens
- 1876: Pierrette et Jacquot, 1 act, with Gille, music by Offenbach, Bouffes Parisiens
- 1877: La Sorrentine, 3 acts, with Moineaux, music by Vasseur, Bouffes Parisiens
External links[]
- 19th-century French journalists
- French male journalists
- 19th-century French dramatists and playwrights
- French opera librettists
- French theatre managers and producers
- People from Limoges
- 1827 births
- 1882 deaths
- Deaths from cancer in France
- Burials at Montmartre Cemetery
- 19th-century French male writers