Feydeau may refer to: Ernest-Aimé Feydeau (1821–1873), French writer Georges Feydeau (1862–1921), playwright, son of Ernest-Aimé Jean-Pierre Feydeau (1903–1970)...
Georges-Léon-Jules-Marie Feydeau (French: [ʒɔʁʒ fɛ.do]; 8 December 1862 – 5 June 1921) was a French playwright of the Belle Époque era, remembered for...
Thierry Feydeau (21 July 1934 – 14 January 2008) was a French actor, director and writer. He was a grandson of the playwright Georges Feydeau, and appeared...
at the Royal Exchange, Manchester (1990) She's in Your Hands by Georges Feydeau at the Royal Exchange, Manchester (1990) Jean, Your Home in the West by...
late 1970s. His first French-language film, an adaptation of the George Feydeau comedy Le Dindon, was released in September 2019. "Holt Mccallany". Turner...
Georges Feydeau, the best-known writer of French farce in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, wrote more than twenty full-length comic plays and twenty...
2013 Three Sisters Anton Chekhov Alain Françon Un fil à la patte Georges Feydeau Jérôme Deschamps Troilus and Cressida William Shakespeare Jean-Yves Ruf...
cited the characters in Gustave Flaubert's Salammbô (1862) and Ernest Feydeau's Le Comte de Chalis (1867) as examples of lesbians because both novels...
gave way to the problem plays of Naturalism and Realism; the farces of Feydeau; Wagner's operatic Gesamtkunstwerk; musical theatre (including Gilbert...
times with Bernard Murat, who made him the ideal interpreter of Georges Feydeau. Overall, he acted in more than thirty plays In 2015, he received a nomination...
Large thoroughfares replaced the channels, altering the urban landscape. Feydeau and Gloriette Islands in the old town were attached to the north bank,...
by Dario Fo, Vsevolod Meyerhold, and Jacques Copeau Farce, from Georges Feydeau to Joe Orton and Alan Ayckbourn Jester Laughing comedy, as practiced by...