Eugène Scribe
Augustin Eugène Scribe was a French dramatist and librettist. He is known for the perfection of the so-called "well-made play", a mainstay of popular theatre for over 100 years, and as the librettist of many of the most successful grand operas.
Biography
Scribe was born in Paris and died there. His father was a silk merchant, and he was well educated, being destined for the law. However, he soon began to write for the stage. His first piece, Le Prétendu sans le savoir, was produced anonymously at the Théâtre des Variétés in 1810 and was a failure. Numerous other plays, written in collaboration with various authors, followed; but Scribe achieved no distinct success till 1815, when he wrote Une Nuit de la garde nationale, a collaboration with Delestre Poirson. Much of his later work was also written in collaboration with others. His debut in serious comedy was made at the Théâtre Français in 1822 with Valérie, the first of many successful pieces of the same kind. Among the actors he wrote starring roles for are Mlle Mars and Rachel. Scribe was elected to the Académie Française in 1834.Scribe's main subject matter was the contemporary bourgeoisie. He mastered his craft writing comédies vaudevilles, short middle-class entertainments, often with songs. Eventually he developed the formulaic "well-made play"; popular pieces with elaborate plots featuring clever twists and turns, and usually centering on a misunderstanding which is revealed early on to the audience but not realised by the protagonists until the final scenes. Characters face a series of obstacles, the resolution of which may create in turn further problems. At the end a scène a faire, with startling revelations, leads to a sensational denouement. Whilst their ingenuity was recognised by contemporary and later critics, the plays lack fine language, depth of character, thought, or social analysis. They thus stand in sharp contrast, for example, to Romantic plays of the same period, such as those of Victor Hugo. Théophile Gautier questioned how it could be that, "an author without poetry, lyricism, style, philosophy, truth or naturalism could be the most successful writer of his epoch, despite the opposition of literature and the critics?"
Scribe was prolific; he wrote various dramas — vaudevilles, comedies, tragedies and opera libretti. To the Théâtre du Gymnase alone he is said to have furnished a hundred and fifty pieces before 1830. He had a number of co-workers,, one of whom supplied the story, another the dialogue, a third the jokes and so on. He is said in some cases to have sent sums of money for "copyright in ideas" to men who were unaware that he had taken suggestions from their work. Among his collaborators were Jean Henri Dupin, Germain Delavigne, Delestre-Poirson, Mélesville, Marc-Antoine Madeleine Désaugiers, Xavier Saintine and Ernest Legouvé.
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The mechanical aspect of Scribe's constructions made his works suitable for operatic adaptation, allowing for "effective contrasting of musical treatment, whilst the confrontations provided excellent opportunities for ensembles."
Scribe wrote libretti for operas for many major composers of his time, often for productions destined for the Paris Opéra. Many of these libretti constitute the basis of the Grand Opera genre and changed the whole course of French lyric drama.
He collaborated with Giacomo Meyerbeer on a number of occasions, and also provided the words for works by Giuseppe Verdi, Vincenzo Bellini, Daniel Auber, Fromental Halévy, François-Adrien Boieldieu, Gaetano Donizetti and Gioachino Rossini. At the time of his death, he was working on a revision of the libretto for Meyerbeer's L'Africaine, which he had originally written in 1838.
Of his 'historical' operas it has been written:
They exist in a parallel universe, in which colourful historical or geographical milieu display a handful of stereotypes who, as a consequence of some secret manoeuvrings in their own pasts and coincidences in the present, are forced to face some implausible crisis of choice or conscience, preferably accompanied by a simultaneous natural disaster or violent death.
Scribe's own hard-headed views on his libretti are summarised in his comments on a dispute over payment with Léon Pillet, the director of the Opéra, in 1841:
I want to be paid for them according to what they bring in, that is to say, a great deal. The...director only wants to pay for them according to what they are worth, that is to say, very little.
Scribe wrote a few novels, but none of any mark. His Œuvres complètes appeared in seventy-six volumes between 1874 and 1885.
He has been assumed to be the father of the politician Georges Coulon.
Works
See also :Category: Libretti by Eugène Scribe and :Category:Plays by Eugène ScribePlays
- 1826: Bertrand et Suzette; ou Le Mariage de raison
- 1833: Bertrand et Raton, ou l'art de conspirer
- 1842: Une Chaine
- 1842: Le Verre d'eau
- 1849: Adrienne Lecouvreur, in conjunction with Legouvé
- 1851: La Bataille de Dames
Plays adapted into opera libretti
- 1831: A ballet-pantomime became the basis of the Italian libretto for Bellini's La sonnambula
- 1832: Le philtre was adapted by Felice Romani into the libretto for Donizetti's L'elisir d'amore
- 1902: Adriana Lecouvreur was adapted into a libretto by Arturo Colautti for Francesco Cilea's Adriana Lecouvreur
Principal libretti
- 1825: Boieldieu's La dame blanche
- 1828: Revisions to a libretto by Germain Delavigne for Auber's La muette de Portici
- 1828: Rossini's Le comte Ory
- 1830: Auber's Fra Diavolo
- 1831: Meyerbeer's Robert le diable
- 1831: La marquise de Brinvilliers set by nine composers
- 1831: Meyerbeer's Les Huguenots
- 1833: Auber's Gustave III, ou Le bal masqué
- 1835: Halévy's La Juive
- 1843: Donizetti's Dom Sébastien
- 1849: Meyerbeer's Le prophète
- 1855: Verdi's Les vêpres siciliennes
- 1856: Auber's Manon Lescaut
- 1865: Meyerbeer's L'Africaine
Honours
- 1847: Officer in the Order of Leopold.
Filmography
- The Dumb Girl of Portici, directed by Phillips Smalley and Lois Weber
- ', directed by Rudolf Biebrach
- Masked Ball, directed by Alfréd Deésy
- La Calomnie, directed by Maurice Mariaud
- ', directed by Luise Kolm and Jacob Fleck
- Adriana Lecouvreur, directed by Ugo Falena
- La moglie che si gettò dalla finestra, directed by Gian Bistolfi
- Dita di fata, directed by
- The Mute of Portici, directed by
- A Glass of Water, directed by Ludwig Berger
- The Faces of Love, directed by Carmine Gallone
- ', directed by Telemaco Ruggeri
- Der Kampf um den Mann, directed by Hans Werckmeister and
- Dream of Love, directed by Fred Niblo
- The Black Domino, directed by Victor Janson
- Devil-May-Care, directed by Sidney Franklin
- ', directed by Mario Bonnard
- *Fra Diavolo, directed by Mario Bonnard
- The Devil's Brother, directed by Hal Roach
- The Ambassador, directed by Baldassarre Negroni
- Adrienne Lecouvreur, directed by Marcel L'Herbier
- ', directed by Amleto Palermi
- The Queen of Navarre, directed by Carmine Gallone
- ', directed by Mario Costa
- Sicilian Uprising, directed by Giorgio Pastina
- , directed by
- The Mute of Portici, directed by
- Adriana Lecouvreur, directed by Guido Salvini
- A Glass of Water, directed by Helmut Käutner