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{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
| name = Alexandre Barrière
| name = Alexis Barrière
| native_name =
| birth_name = Daniel Alexis François Barrière
| birth_date = 22 October 1792
| birth_place = [[Paris]], France
| death_date = 30 August 1865<ref>''Paris, France, Births, Marriages, and Deaths, 1555-1929''</ref>
| death_place = [[Paris]]
| nationality = French
}}
}}


'''Alexis Barrière''', full name Daniel Alexandre François Barrière, also called Barrière aîné, ([[Paris]] 22 October 1792 – ca. 1865 <ref>Last known date of his belonging to the Société des auteurs et compositeurs dramatiques.</ref>) was a 19th-century Frenchy [[playwright]], [[engraver]] and [[song writer]].
'''Daniel Alexis François Barrière''', also called Barrière aîné, (22 October 1792 – 30 August 1865) was a 19th-century French [[playwright]], [[engraver]] and [[song writer]].


== Biography ==
== Biography ==
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Barriere, Alexandre}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Barriere, Alexandre}}
[[Category:19th-century French dramatists and playwrights]]
[[Category:19th-century French dramatists and playwrights]]
[[Category:19th-century French songwriters]]
[[Category:French engravers]]
[[Category:French engravers]]
[[Category:French songwriters]]
[[Category:French male songwriters]]
[[Category:French male dramatists and playwrights]]
[[Category:Writers from Paris]]
[[Category:Writers from Paris]]
[[Category:1792 births]]
[[Category:1792 births]]
[[Category:Year of death missing]]
[[Category:1865 deaths]]

Latest revision as of 15:52, 7 December 2023

Alexis Barrière
Born
Daniel Alexis François Barrière

22 October 1792
Paris, France
Died30 August 1865[1]
NationalityFrench

Daniel Alexis François Barrière, also called Barrière aîné, (22 October 1792 – 30 August 1865) was a 19th-century French playwright, engraver and song writer.

Biography

[edit]

An engraver, trained by his father, he drew a part of the campaign plans for the marshal Laurent de Gouvion-Saint-Cyr as well as maps of Swabia, Russia, Corsica or Spain and of the county Mayo. [2] He also made prints for the library.

His plays were presented on the most famous Parisian stages of the 19th century: Théâtre du Vaudeville, Théâtre des Variétés, Théâtre de l'Ambigu-Comique, etc.

His songs were published in 1829 in the book Étrennes lyriques ou Recueil de romances et nocturnes, with piano or harpes accompagnements by Antoine Romagnesi.

Plays and songs

[edit]
  • 1813: Le Mari en vacances, comédie-vaudeville in 1 act, with Marc-Antoine Désaugiers
  • 1816: Trois pour une ou les absents n'ont pas toujours tort, comédie-vaudeville en 1 act, with Désaugiers
  • 1817: La Vendange normande, ou les Deux voisins, vaudeville in 1 act, with Michel-Joseph Gentil de Chavagnac
  • 1830: Notre Grand'mère, chansonnette
  • 1835: Mon bonnet de nuit, comédie-vaudeville in 1 act, with Georges Duval
  • 1835: Oui et non, comédie-vaudeville in 2 acts
  • 1837: Les savetiers francs-juges, chronique messinaise in 3 acts, mingled with songs
  • 1840: Les Pages de Louis XII, comedy mingled with song, in 2 acts, with Ferdinand de Villeneuve
  • 1842: Le poète, ou Les droits de l'auteur, comedy in 1 act and in verses
  • 1848: L'Autel de la Patrie, hymne national, music by Félix Marie
  • 1857: Le legs (The Legacy), comedy by Marivaux set in verses
  • 1861: La Sainte-Catherine, ou Un bienfait n'est jamais perdu, à-propos-vaudeville in 1 act

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Paris, France, Births, Marriages, and Deaths, 1555-1929
  2. ^ Charles Le Blanc, Manuel de l'amateur d'estampes, contenant: Un dictionnaire des graveurs, 1854, p. 155

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Joseph-marie Quérard, La littérature française contemporaine, vol.3, 1827-1844, p. 164
  • Charles Gabet, Dictionnaire des artistes de l'école française au XIXe, 1831, p. 29
  • Edwin Colby Byam, Théodore Barrière, dramatist of the second empire, 1938, p. 14