Bobosse (theater)

See also: Bobosse (homonymy)

Bobosse is a Play written by André Roussin in 1950.

Creation

Bobosse had its first representation with the royal Théâtre of the Park to Brussels on February 9th, 1950, then was played (starting from March 14th, 1950) Théâtre of Michodière of Paris.

The distribution was:

Argument

This milked comedy of the difficulty in being an actor, and the difficulty in being in love. An actor (Tony) plays the part of a draftsman of press (Bobosse) disillusioned and perspicacious which knows that his/her partner will leave it and lets it make. While returning at his place to dine with the other main actors on the part, Tony notes that his wife has just left it, that of which it did not suspect, and that plunges it in despair. The part exploits from one scene to another the passage between the personal feelings of the actor and the psychology of the character whom it incarnates.

Adaptation

The part was adapted to the cinema in 1959. The film was carried out by Etienne Périer with, in particular, Micheline Presle (Régine and Simone), François Périer (Bobosse, Tony, the court), Jacques Jouanneau (Edgar and Leon), Amarande (Anne-Marie and Gilberte) and Jacques Dufilho (Gaston, the manservant).

External bond

Card-index IMDb on the adaptation to the cinema.

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