Desfontaines-Lavallée

See also: Desfontaines

François-Georges Fouques Deshayes known as Desfontaines or Desfontaines-Lavallée , born with Caen in 1733 and died in Paris the November 25th 1825, is a writer and Dramaturge French.

Before the French revolution, it had been royal critic, secretary and librarian of Mister. He will coopéra with the publication of the Nouvelle Library of the novels and composed itself some novels, inter alia the Lettres of Sophie and of the knight of *** (1765).

He gave, either only, or in company with Yves Barré and Jean-Baptiste Radet, a great number of parts of which the most tasted are:

  • the Blind man of Palmyre (1767)
  • Around fifty (1771)
  • Isménor (1773)
  • May (1776)
  • the Lover rules (1780)
  • the Right of the lord (1783)
  • the Dowry (1785)
  • Green-green (1790)
  • Arlequin bill-poster (1792)
  • Pure Suzanne (1793)
  • the Festival of the Equality (1794)
  • the Dream, or the Column of Rosback (1806)
  • Mr. Durelief (1810)

It was one of the founders of the Dîners of the Light comedy and the Caveau .

External bond

  • Its plays and their representations on site CÉSAR

Source

  • Gustave Vapereau, universal Dictionary of the literatures , Paris, Hatchet, 1876, p. 615-6

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