Joseph Aude


Joseph Aude was a familiar of Necker and Buffon whose biography he wrote as well as a comédie en vaudeville about his marriage, presented at the Société littéraire et scientifique d'Apt. Aude Joseph is considered an important author of the traveling theater of the early nineteenth, thanks to his Cadet Rousselle.

Biography

He made his literary debut in 1776, with Fête des Muses, an à-propos in verse played at the Théâtre de Versailles before the king and the court. He met Buffon at the Jardin du Roi, where chevalier de Mouchy, of the House of Noailles, a novelist and correspondent of Voltaire, had led him. Having become familiar with him in Paris, he was his guest at Montbard, but was not, contrary to popular belief, his personal secretary.
He stroke a friendship with the marquis Domenico Caracciolo, ambassador of the Kingdom of Naples in France. In 1781, he was appointed viceroy of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies and took Aude with him. After he was appointed foreign minister in Naples, 1786, Aude returned to France and joined Buffon in Montbard.
Chevalier Aude was honored with a letter from Frederick the Great. He was tied with Dorvigny, creator of the character , and with Brunet, his favorite actor and had the honor of being played by Talma in 1790.
He was said to be a dissipator, prodigal and drunkard because at the end of his life, he assiduously attended cabarets.

Works

He is however not the only author to have used "Cadet Roussel" as a character. Indeed, the CESAR database reports many Cadet Roussel, from the Cadet Roussel garçon d'auberge, by Prévost to the École tragique ou Cadet Roussel maître de déclamation, by Aude for the 18th century, then others during the 19th century such as Victor Hugo who, in his Ninety-Three, featured Danton ridiculing Robespierre who had just monopolized the floor for two hours at the National Convention: