Georges Duval (journalist)

For other uses, see Duval.
For the 19th-century French playwright, see Georges Duval.
Georges Duval

Portrait by Léon Tanzi and Georges Duval's signature (1886).
Born 2 February 1847
Paris
Died 23 September 1919(1919-09-23) (aged 72)
Occupation Journalist
Playwright

Georges Duval (2 February 1847 – 23 September 1919) was a French journalist and playwright.

Biographie

Georges Duval was a columnist at Le Gaulois under the pseudonyms Claude Rieux and Tabartin. He also collaborated with the newspaper L'Événement.[1]

In 1883, Guy de Maupassant dedicated him his short story Le Cas de madame Luneau.

His greatest theatrical success was the comédie en vaudeville Coquin de printemps, composed in 1888 with Adolphe Jaime. This play was revived in Broadway in 1906 by Richard Carle under the title Spring Chicken. In 1898, he also wrote with Albert Vanloo, the libretto of the operetta Véronique by André Messager.

In 1892, he was chief editor of La Libre Parole.[2]

Works

Comedies
Other

References

  1. Louis Forestier, « Notice pour Dur les chats », Guy de Maupassant, Contes et Nouvelles, tome II, Gallimard, Bibliothèque de la Pléiade, 1979, (p. 1538)
  2. Raphaël Viau, Vingt ans d'antisémitisme 1889-1909, Paris, Fasquelle, 1910, (p. 36-47).
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