Paul Burani
Paul Burani (born Urbain Roucoux; Paris, 26 March 1845 – Paris, 9 October 1901), was a French author, actor, songwriter and librettist.
He had a short career as an actor at the Théâtre de Belleville and in the French provinces, after which he directed a journal, Le Café-Concert. At the commencement of his career as a songwriter he used the name Burani, an anagram of his first name.
Works[]
He collaborated on libretti for the following operas:
- Le Droit du seigneur (with Maxime Boucheron), music by Léon Vasseur - 1878[1]
- Le Billet de logement (with Boucheron), Vasseur - 1879
- La Barbière improvisée (with Jules Montini), Joseph O'Kelly - 1882
- Le Petit Parisien (with Boucheron), Vasseur - 1882
- François les bas-bleus (with Ernest Dubreuil and Eugène Humbert), André Messager - 1883
- Le Mariage au tambour (after Alexandre Dumas), Vasseur - 1886
- Le roi malgré lui (with Emile de Najac), Emmanuel Chabrier - 1887[2]
- Ninon de Lenclos (with Blavet), Vasseur, 1887
- Le Puits qui parle (with Beaumont), Edmond Audran - 1888
- Le Prince soleil (with Hippolyte Raymond), Vasseur - 1889
- Le Commandant Laripete (with Silvestre, Valabrigue), Vasseur - 1892
- Le Cabinet Piperlin (with Raymond), Hervé - 1897
Le Sire de Fisch Ton Kan was a popular song during the Paris Commune (1871), with words by Paul Burani and music by Antonin Louis, which denounced Napoléon III who was leading France to military disasters; the song contains many plays on words.[3]
References[]
Categories:
- French opera librettists
- 1845 births
- 1901 deaths
- French journalists
- French male stage actors
- Male actors from Paris
- Writers from Paris
- French male dramatists and playwrights
- 19th-century French dramatists and playwrights
- 19th-century French male writers
- French male non-fiction writers