Philippe Gille (date unknown)

Philippe Emile François Gille (10 December 1831 – 19 March 1901) was a French dramatist and opera librettist, who was born and died in Paris. He co-wrote wrote more than twenty librettos between 1857 and 1893, the most famous of which are Massenet's Manon and Delibes' Lakmé.

Gille studied law and was a clerk for a time at the Préfecture de la Seine, before becoming secretary of the Théâtre Lyrique and, from 1869, an art and music critic for Le Figaro.

Gille was elected to the Académie des Beaux-Arts in 1899 and was appointed as an officer of the Legion of Honour.

Life and career

Gille was born in Paris on 18 December 1830, the son of Louis François Gille and his wife, Marie Adelaide Benjamine, née Bidaut. He was educated at the Lycée Charlemagne, after which he studied law for a time and then took up sculpture, before working as a clerk in the office of the Préfecture de la Seine. After next working as secretary of the Théâtre Lyrique he embarked on a parallel career as a playwright and librettist on the one hand and as a journalist on the other.

In 1857 Gille provided the composer Jacques Offenbach with a libretto for a one-act comic opera, Vent du soir, ou L'horrible festin ("Evening Wind, or The Horrible Feast") produced at the Théâtre des Bouffes-Parisiens. Over the next twelve years he worked as sole or co-author on fourteen comedies, some of them spoken and some operatic. His literary collaborators included Ludovic Halévy, Eugène Grangé and Hector Crémieux, and he worked with Léo Delibes on four comic operas.

As a journalist, Gille wrote for papers including Le Petit Journal and Le Soleil before joining the staff of Le Figaro in 1869. There, he wrote about the arts. A section of the front page was reserved for his "Echoes" column, in which, a colleague said, "the spirit of Paris smiled every morning". The same colleague recalled:

In August 1871 Gille married Zoé Jeanne Marie Massé, daughter of the composer Victor Massé. They had one son.

During the 1870s Gille collaborated with, among other dramatists and librettists, Eugène Labiche, Victorien Sardou, Arnold Mortier, Edmond Gondinet and Henri Meilhac. Composers with whom he worked included Offenbach, Charles Lecocq and Olivier Métra. In his last years in the theatre Gille was co-author of two serious operas that entered the international repertoire: for Delibes, Lakmé (1883) with Gondinet and for Jules Massenet, Manon (1884) with Meilhac.

Gille was elected a member of the Académie des Beaux-Arts and was appointed to the Legion of Honour. He died in Paris on 19 March 1901, aged 69, and was buried in the Cimetière du Nord, Montmartre.

Stage works

TitleGenreActsCo-authorsComposerTheatreDate
Vent du soir, ou L'horrible festin ("Evening Wind, or The Horrible Feast")opérette bouffe1Jacques OffenbachThéâtre des Bouffes-Parisiens16 May 1857
M de Bonne Etoileopéra-comique1Léo DelibesBouffes4 Feb 1860
Le carnaval des revuesrevue3Ludovic Halévy and Eugène GrangéOffenbachBouffes10 Feb 1860
Valets de Gascogneopéra comique1Alfred DufresneThéâtre Lyrique2 Jun 1860
Maître Palmaopéra comique1Eugène FurpilleMlle RivayLyrique17 Jun 1860
L'hôtel de la poste ("The Post Office")opéra comique1DufresneBouffes15 Nov 1860
Le serpent à plumesopérette bouffe1ChamDelibesBouffes16 Dec 1864
Le boeuf Apis ("The Apis Bull")opéra bouffeFurpilleDelibesBouffes15 Apr 1865
Sacripantopéra comique2Jules DupratoThéâtre des Fantaisies-Parisiennes26 Sep 1866
Les bergersopéra comiqueHector CrémieuxOffenbachBouffes11 Dec 1865
Tabarin le duellisteopérette1FurpilleLéon PillautBouffes13 Apr 1866
Cent mille francs et ma fille ("One Hundred Thousand Francs and My Daughter")vaudeville4Adolphe JaimeThéâtre Déjazet11 Apr 1868
Les horreurs de la guerreopéra-bouffe2Jules CostéThéâtre de l'Athénée9 Dec 1868
L' Écossais de Chatou ("The Scotsman of Chatou")opéra-bouffe1JaimeBouffes16 Jan 1869
La cour du roi Pétaud ("King Petaud's Court")opéra comique3JaimeDelibesThéâtre des Variétés24 Apr 1869
J'insulte ma femmevaudevilleThéâtre des Folies-Dramatiques25 Dec 1871
Le tour du chien vertopéra-bouffe3DupratoFolies-Dramatiques25 Dec 1871
Garanti dix ans ("Guaranteed for Ten Years")vaudeville1Eugène LabicheVariétés12 Feb 1874
Les près-Saint-Gervaisopéra bouffe3Victorien SardouCharles LecocqVariétés14 Nov 1874
Les 30 millions de gladiatorvaudeville4LabicheVariétés22 Jan 1875
Pierrette et Jacquotopérette1Jules NoriacOffenbachBouffes13 Oct 1876
Le docteur Oxopéra bouffe3Arnold Mortier after Jules VerneOffenbachVariétés26 Jan 1877
Les charbonniers ("The Charcoal Burners")opéra bouffe1Napoléon CosteVariétés4 Apr 1877
Yeddaballet3MortierOlivier MétraOpéra17 Jan 1879
Jean de Nivelleopera3Edmond GondinetDelibesOpéra-Comique188 Mar 1880
Le mari à Babettecomedy3Henri MeilhacThéâtre du Palais-Royal31 Dec 1881
La Farandoleballet3MortierThéodore DuboisOpéra6 Mar 1882
Lakméopera3GondinetDelibesOpéra-Comique14 Apr 1883
Ma camaradecomedy5MeilhacPalais-Royal9 Oct 1883
Manonopéra comique5MeilhacJules MassenetOpéra-Comique19 Jan 1884
Ripopéra comique5Meilhac after H. B. FarnieRobert PlanquetteFolies-Dramatiques11 Nov 1884
La bonne ("The Right One")vaudeville1MeilhacFolies-Dramatiques21 Nov 1884
La ronde du commissairecomedy4MeilhacThéâtre du Gymnase27 Nov 1884
Camillecomedy1Comédie-Française12 Mar 1890
Kassyadrame lyrique4MeilhacDelibesOpéra-Comique4 Mar 1893

Source: Nos auteurs et compositeurs dramatiques and Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians.

Sources

  • Martin, Jules (1897). (in French). Paris: Flammarion. OCLC .

External links