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  1. 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 his farces, written between 1886 and 1914.

  2. Jun 1, 2024 · Georges Feydeau was a French dramatist whose farces delighted Parisian audiences in the years immediately prior to World War I and are still regularly performed. Feydeau was the son of the novelist Ernest Feydeau, the author of the novel Fanny (1858).

  3. Georges Feydeau, né le 8 décembre 1862 à Paris et mort le 5 juin 1921 à Rueil-Malmaison, est un auteur dramatique, peintre et collectionneur d'œuvres d'art franco-polonais, connu pour ses nombreux vaudevilles.

  4. A Flea in Her Ear (French: La Puce à l'oreille) is a play by Georges Feydeau written in 1907, at the height of the Belle Époque. The author called it a vaudeville, but in Anglophone countries, where it is the most popular of Feydeau's plays, it is usually described as a farce.

  5. May 29, 2018 · Feydeau was born in Paris in 1862, the son of a novelist who expected his child to become a writer. The younger Feydeau obliged, writing his first comic monologue at the age of 20....

  6. Overview. Georges Feydeau. (1862—1921) French dramatist. Quick Reference. (1862–1921) French writer of farces. Feydeau was born in Paris, son of the novelist Ernest Feydeau. He began writing for the theatre in 1881, and over the next thirty-five years produced some forty plays.

  7. Aug 5, 2020 · Georges Feydeau is the modern master of farce. Regarded by some as the greatest French dramatist since Molière, others have only granted him the dubious achievement of perfecting the commercially seductive bedroom farce, that somewhat tawdry drama of quick entrances and exits and bed-hopping run amok.