Albert de Saint-Albin

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Albert de Saint-Albin (1843, in Paris – 18 December 1901, in Paris) was a 19th-century French playwright, journalist, chansonnier and librettist.

Albert de Saint Albin

A journalist at Le Temps, chief editor of the Jockey (1866) and Le Figaro (1880), he was known as a sports columnist under the pseudonym Robert Milton and was a great promoter of fencing.[1]

His plays were presented on the most important Parisian stages of the 19th century, including the Théâtre des Variétés, the Théâtre du Palais-Royal, the Théâtre du Vaudeville, and the Théâtre de la Gaîté.

Moreover, Saint-Albin was a collector of paintings by Eugène Boudin of which he owned a dozen works[2] and by Gustave Moreau.[3]

Works

Theatre

Sport

  • 1875: Les Salles d'armes de Paris
  • 1875: Le Sportman
  • 1889: Les sports à Paris, 2 vol.
  • 1889: Les cirques
  • 1890: Les courses de chevaux en France, Hachette
  • 1899: Les Courses de lévriers, le coursing, greyhounds et fox-terriers by Alfred de Sauvenière, preface
  • undated: À travers les salles d'armes

Songs

  • 1874: Le Langage des yeux !, with Prével et Lecocq
  • 1874: Les Oiseaux en cage, with Auguste Coédès
  • 1878: Pas de récompense. Plaintes d'une Parisienne, with Coédès
  • 1885: Barcarolle d'Asnières
  • 1894: L'Ascenseur !

Bibliography

References

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