Victor de Cottens
Victor de Cottens (21 August 1862 – 26 February 1956) was a French dramatist, librettist, stage director, and theatre critic.
De Cottens was born in Paris.[1] For the Folies Bergère, he directed every edition of the Revue des Folies-Bergère produced by Émile and Vincent Isola; each of these revues offered various acts linked by two commentators, the commère and compère.[2] Between 1908 and 1911, he and H. B. Marinelli ran the Olympia music hall in Paris.[3] He and E. Danancier collaborated as interim directors of the Théâtre du Vaudeville in Paris when that theatre, closed at the beginning of the First World War, reopened on 2 April 1915.[4]
He died in Paris in 1956.[1]
Notes[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b "Victor de Cottens (1862-1956)", data.bnf.fr, Bibliothèque nationale de France, retrieved 5 November 2015
- ^ Gutsche-Miller, Sarah (2015), Parisian music-hall ballet, 1871–1913, Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press, p. 291, ISBN 9781580464420
- ^ Gutsche-Miller 2015, p. 30
- ^ Lamothe, Peter (2008), Theater music in France, 1864–1914 (Ph.D. thesis), University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, p. 109, ISBN 9780549670407
Categories:
- 1862 births
- 1956 deaths
- Writers from Paris
- 19th-century French dramatists and playwrights
- 20th-century French dramatists and playwrights
- French theatre directors
- Theatrical people stubs