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Molière

Molière was France's greatest comic dramatist who wrote, directed, and acted in his own plays in the 17th century. His comedies addressed serious themes and influenced modern drama. Some of his most famous plays include The Misanthrope, Tartuffe, and The Hypochondriac. Molière critiqued hypocrisy and excess in society through his characters and celebrated youth, authenticity, and moderation. His works had a profound influence on French comedy and language that continues today.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
295 views3 pages

Molière

Molière was France's greatest comic dramatist who wrote, directed, and acted in his own plays in the 17th century. His comedies addressed serious themes and influenced modern drama. Some of his most famous plays include The Misanthrope, Tartuffe, and The Hypochondriac. Molière critiqued hypocrisy and excess in society through his characters and celebrated youth, authenticity, and moderation. His works had a profound influence on French comedy and language that continues today.

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Molière

I INTRODUCTION  
Molière (1622-1673), France’s greatest comic dramatist, who produced, directed, and acted in
the plays he wrote. Many of his comedies addressed serious themes and pointed the way to
modern drama and experimental theater.

II LIFE  
Born Jean-Baptiste Poquelin in Paris, the son of a well-to-do upholsterer who worked at the
king’s court, Molière attended the Jesuit Collège de Clermont. He then turned his back on a
secure future in the position he could have inherited from his father and became an actor
instead. After founding the Illustre Théâtre (Illustrious Theater Company) in Paris with actors
Joseph and Madeleine Béjart, he adopted the name Molière. Although the company foundered
in 1645, he toured the French provinces in another troupe with the Béjarts from 1645 to 1658.
During that time, Molière began writing short plays, influenced by French farce and the popular
form of Italian theater known as commedia dell’arte.

In October 1658 the traveling company accepted an offer from the king of France, Louis XIV
(known as the “Sun King”), to present plays in the Théâtre du Petit Bourbon, part of the Louvre
palace in Paris. There Molière produced his first major comedy, Les précieuses ridicules (1659;
translated as The Conceited Ladies, 1732), a satire on the extravagant manners, style, and
language of contemporary women who wished to distinguish themselves through excessively
refined taste and behavior.

In 1662 Molière married Armande Béjart, the much younger sister of Madeleine and also a
member of his troupe. The marriage was not a happy one. This misfortune was reflected in
L’école des femmes (1662; School for Wives, 1739). In this play the character Arnolphe’s
efforts to shape his much younger prospective bride, Agnès, through education in a convent and
his own tyrannical rules are defeated by Agnès’s natural inclination toward Horace, a man her
own age.

Les précieuses ridicules and L’école des femmes were highly successful and aroused
considerable jealousy among Molière’s rivals. To answer his critics and satirize them in the
process, Molière wrote and produced two short discussion plays in 1663: La critique de l’école
des femmes (The School for Wives Criticized, 1739) and L’impromptu de Versailles (The
Impromptu of Versailles, 1739). The king supported Molière during these battles and in 1664
became godfather to his son. That same year Molière wrote the first version of Tartuffe
(translated 1670), a play that satirized religious hypocrisy. It was banned from the stage through
the efforts of the Roman Catholic Church. Molière wrote two more versions of the play, in
1667 and 1669, and the third version was finally produced. During these years he also wrote
seven of his greatest plays, including the complex Dom Juan (1665; Don Juan, 1739); his
masterpiece, Le misanthrope (1666; The Misanthrope, 1739); L’avare (1668; The Miser, 1739);
and Le bourgeois gentilhomme (1670; The Would-Be Gentleman, 1739), called a comedy-ballet
because it included ballet interludes as part of the narrative. In addition to writing these plays
(most of which are in rhyming couplets), Molière managed the business of his company,
directed all the productions, and played some of the most demanding roles.
Molière’s last great plays were Les femmes savantes (1672; The Learned Ladies, 1739) and Le
malade imaginaire (1673; The Hypochondriac, 1739). Ironically, Molière, who had been
grievously ill for some time, played the role of the hypochondriac in his last play, fell mortally
ill during the fourth performance, and died an hour after being taken home. Because of the
disapproval of the Roman Catholic Church, it was only through the intervention of the king that
Molière was allowed to be buried in holy ground, and this only in the dead of night.

III WORKS  
Molière’s works reveal an evolution from farce to more serious comedies of manners and
character. In terms of form, Les précieuses ridicules is important because, although a one-act
play written in prose, it is nonetheless a sophisticated comedy of manners. Similarly, L’école
des maris (1661; School for Husbands, 1739) is significant because it addresses a more serious
subject than earlier works and takes a more sophisticated form, a five-act social comedy written
in verse in a meter known as alexandrine. Tartuffe and Le misanthrope, five-act plays in verse,
mark the height of Molière’s career in the perfection of their poetry and the subtlety and
complexity of their themes. Later plays innovated through their form; Le bourgeois
gentilhomme, for example, was a comedy-ballet that paved the way for opera.

The society of Molière’s time, led by King Louis XIV, formed an intelligent and cultivated
audience ready to appreciate a new style of comic drama and able to discern serious moral and
social issues beneath the laughter and fun. Molière had the good fortune to write and perform
during a creative and energetic age, and for a society that was itself theatrical in its interest in
spectacle and its keen perception of the difference between reality and illusion. No less
important for Molière were members of the audience from the lower classes (called parterre
because they stood in front of the stage, the parterre), and he rated their understanding and
appreciation of his plays very highly.

Molière was preoccupied with what it meant to be human. He presents characters who—
through their hypocrisy, immoderation, vanity, tyranny, and greed—exceed the acceptable
limits of being human and must therefore be punished through laughter. The hypocrites
Tartuffe and Orgon tyrannize the family. Alceste of Le misanthrope demands absolute sincerity
of his merely human associates. Pedantic vanity dominates the learned ladies of Les femmes
savantes, and Arnolphe tries to play God in forming Agnès in L’école des femmes. In all these
plays, the qualities that win out in the end are authenticity, moderation, and respect for what
follows nature’s plan or advances human freedom. Often the plot involves the efforts of old
men to marry or marry off young women. Molière, who himself had taken a bride 20 years his
junior with disastrous consequences, condemned such efforts to go against the order of nature.
He celebrates the triumph of youth and fertility over old age and sterility at the end of such
plays as L’école des femmes, Tartuffe, Le médecin malgré lui (1666; The Doctor In Spite of
Himself, 1739), and L’avare.
No play better illustrates Molière’s comic art in all its complexity than Le misanthrope. Alceste,
a suitor of the coquettish Célimène, has come to Célimène’s home to demand once and for all
that she express her feelings and intentions. Alceste demands absolute truthfulness in all social
relations, and Molière derives considerable comic effect from the character’s infatuation with
the ever-false Célimène. Alceste’s friend Philinte stands for moderation in all things, including
truthfulness, and the dialogue between the two men throughout the play analyzes this issue.
Other suitors, meanwhile, arrive to plague Alceste. The prudish Arsinöé, in love with Alceste,
duels verbally with Célimène in a scene of brilliant repartee. It is difficult to decide which of
the many positions represented in the play Molière favors, but many critics feel that Eliante,
Célimène’s cousin, who loves Alceste but will perhaps marry Philinte, best represents the
author’s views. Eliante’s behavior and words reflect a philosophy of moderation like Philinte’s,
but she insists there is something noble about Alceste and his views. Molière seems to suggest
that even moderation itself can be excessive. The play ends as Alceste, rejected by Célimène,
leaves to live by himself in the “desert” of the provinces.

IV ASSESSMENT  
French comedy since Molière is inseparable from his innovations. The Comédie Française,
founded in 1680 as the first state-supported theater in France, has long been known as “the
house of Molière.” The 18th-century dramatists Pierre Marivaux and Pierre Beaumarchais were
deeply indebted to Molière—Marivaux in his use of sophisticated language and Beaumarchais
with his biting satires—as were many of the comic writers of the 19th century. Critics in more
recent times have detected Molière’s imprint on writers of the theater of the absurd in the 1950s
and on other experimental movements.

The clearest evidence of the enduring legacy of Molière can be found in the French language
itself. Just as one finds in English, Italian, and Spanish expressions from the works of William
Shakespeare, Dante Alighieri, and Miguel de Cervantes, respectively, so the French use lines
from Molière’s plays in everyday speech, often unaware of their source.

Contributed By:
D. Dale Cosper
1

1"Molière."Microsoft® Encarta® Encyclopedia 2001. © 1993-2000 Microsoft


Corporation. All rights reserved.

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