Félicien Marceau  | |
|---|---|
| Born | 16 September 1913 | 
| Died | 7 March 2012 (aged 98) Paris  | 
| Occupation(s) | Novelist Playwright Essayist  | 
Félicien Marceau (16 September 1913 – 7 March 2012) was a French novelist, playwright and essayist originally from Belgium. His real name was Louis Carette. He was close to the Hussards right-wing literary movement, which in turn was close to the monarchist movement .[1][2] He was born in Kortenberg, Flemish Brabant.[1]
Marceau received the Prix Goncourt for his book Creezy (ISBN 0714507083) in 1969. On 27 November 1975 he was elected to the Académie française, succeeding Marcel Achard.[2][3] In 1974, Goudji created the academician's sword for Félicien Marceau.[4]
Bibliography
- 1948 Chasseneuil, novel (Gallimard)
 - 1949 Casanova ou l’anti-Don Juan, essay (Gallimard)
 - 1951 Capri petite île, novel (Gallimard)
 - 1951 Chair et Cuir, novel (Gallimard )
 - 1952 L’Homme du roi, novel (Gallimard)
 - 1953 En de secrètes noces, stories (Calmann-Lévy)
 - 1953 L’École des moroses, one-act play (Fayard)
 - 1953 Bergère légère, novel (Gallimard)
 - 1954 Caterina, three-act play (Théâtre I) (Gallimard)
 - 1955 Balzac et son monde, essay (Gallimard)
 - 1955 Les Élans du cœur, novel (Gallimard)
 - 1957 Les Belles Natures, stories (Gallimard)
 - 1957 L'Œuf, two part play (Théâtre II) (Gallimard)
 - 1959 La Bonne Soupe, two-act play (Théâtre I) (Gallimard)
 - 1960 La Mort de Néron, one-act play (Théâtre II)
 - 1960 L’Étouffe-chrétien, two-act play (Théâtre II)
 - 1962 Les Cailloux, two-act play (Gallimard)
 - 1964 La Preuve par quatre, two-act play (Théâtre I)
 - 1965 Madame Princesse, two-act play (Théâtre II)
 - 1967 Diana et la Tuda, de Luigi Pirandello, play (Denoël)
 - 1967 Un jour j’ai rencontré la vérité, two-act play
 - 1968 Les Années courtes, mémoires (Gallimard )
 - 1969 Le Babour, two-act play (Gallimard)
 - 1969 Creezy, novel (Gallimard)
 - 1971 Preface to Blazac's Le Père Goriot (Gallimard)
 - 1972 L’Homme en question, two-act play (Gallimard )
 - 1972 L’Ouvre-boîte, five-act play (Gallimard)
 - 1975 Le Corps de mon ennemi, novel (Gallimard)
 - 1975 Les Secrets de la Comédie humaine, two-act play (L’Avant-Scène)
 - 1977 Le Roman en liberté, essay (Gallimard)
 - 1977 Les Personnages de la Comédie humaine (Gallimard)
 - 1978 La Trilogie de la villégiature, de Carlo Goldoni, play after the adaption of Giorgio Strehler (Éditions de la Comédie-Française)
 - 1979 À nous de jouer, two-act play (Gallimard)
 - 1983 Une insolente liberté. Les aventures de Casanova, essay (Gallimard)
 - 1984 Appelez-moi Mademoiselle, novel (Gallimard )
 - 1985 La Carriole du père Juniet (La Différence)
 - 1987 Les Passions partagées, novel (Gallimard)
 - 1989 Un Oiseau dans le ciel, novel (Gallimard )
 - 1992 Les Ingénus, stories (Gallimard )
 - 1993 La Terrasse de Lucrezia (Gallimard)
 - 1994 Le Voyage de noces de Figaro (Les Belles-Lettres)
 - 1997 La Grande Fille, novel (Gallimard)
 - 1998 La Fille du pharaon, fables (Mercure de France)
 - 1998 L’imagination est une science exacte, interviews with Charles Dantzig (Gallimard)
 - 2000 L’Affiche, novel (Gallimard)
 - 2002 L'homme en question (Gallimard)
 
Filmography
- Three Girls in Paris, directed by Gabriel Axel (1963, based on the short story Trois de perdues)
 - La Bonne Soupe, directed by Robert Thomas (1964, based on the play La Bonne Soupe)
 - L'Œuf, directed by Jean Herman (1972, based on the play L'Œuf)
 - Creezy, directed by Pierre Granier-Deferre (1974, based on the novel Creezy)
 - Body of My Enemy, directed by Henri Verneuil (1976, based on the novel Le Corps de mon ennemi)
 
Screenwriter
- The Three Thieves, directed by Lionello De Felice (1954)
 - Love and the Frenchwoman, anthology film, episode: "L'Enfance", directed by Henri Decoin (1960)
 - The Seven Deadly Sins, anthology film, 2 episodes: "L'Orgueil", directed by Roger Vadim, and "L'Avarice", directed by Claude Chabrol (1962)
 - Une blonde comme ça, directed by Jean Jabely (1962)
 
References
- 1 2 "Famous Belgians". belgiumtheplaceto.be. 2011. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
 - 1 2 "Félicien Marceau". academie-francaise.fr (in French). 2011. Archived from the original on 16 September 2011. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
 - ↑ "Félicien Marceau". evene.fr (in French). 2011. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
 - ↑ "L'epee d'academicien de Felicien Marceau, par Goudji By Marc Wittmer on ExposureRoom". exposureroom.com (in French). 2011. Archived from the original on 5 October 2011. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
 
External links
- (in French) L'Académie française
 - Félicien Marceau at IMDb
 
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