Louis Artus (10 January 1870 - 11 May 1960) [1] was a French writer.
Louis Artus | |
---|---|
Born | 10 January 1870 |
Died | 11 May 1960 | (aged 90)
Occupation(s) | Writer, dramatist |
A dramatist, playwright, novelist and critic, Artus began his career with parts in verse such as La Duchesse Putiphar. After studying with the Jesuits (in France and England), Artus, who regularly attended literary circles, collaborated with various newspapers like Le Gaulois, Excelsior, L'Intransigeant, Le Petit Journal, etc. He revealed himself as deeply Christian, attracted by the mysticism of the Middle Ages, and wrote several novels of Catholic inspiration.[2]
Artus died in Paris at age 90.
He has authored several boulevard plays :
- 1905: Cœur de moineau
- 1907: L'Amour en banque
- 1907: L'Ingénu libertin
- 1910: Le Petit Dieu
- 1929: Un homme d'hier
He has also written novels, particularly his famous trilogy :
- 1918: La Maison du fou (chronique de Saint-Léonard), éd. Emile-Paul frères
- 1920: La Maison du sage (histoire d'un crime), éd. Emile-Paul frères
- 1922:Le Vin de ta vigne (nouvelle chronique de Saint-Léonard), éd. Emile-Paul frères
and
- 1926: La chercheuse d'amour, éd. Bernard Grasset
- 1928: Les chiens de Dieu, éd. Bernard Grasset
- 1930: Au soir de Port-Royal, éd. Bernard Grasset
- 1932: Paix sur la terre ?, éd. Bernard Grasset
- 1939: L'hérésie du bonheur, éd. Plon
- 1945: La plus belle histoire d'amour du monde, éd. Denoël
Comedian
edit- 1909 : Beethoven by René Fauchois, directed by André Antoine at the Théâtre de l'Odéon
References
edit- ^ See the entry of the BNF Archived 2007-05-13 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Who's Who in France XXe siècle (Paris, éd. Jacques Lafitte, 2001), p. 76.