Charles-François Panard

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Born2 November 1689
Died13 March 1765(1765-03-13) (aged 75)
Paris, France
OccupationsChansonnier
Playwright
Poet
Charles-François Panard
Born2 November 1689
Died13 March 1765(1765-03-13) (aged 75)
Paris, France
OccupationsChansonnier
Playwright
Poet

Charles-François Panard, or Pannard, (2 November 1689[1] – 13 June 1765) was an 18th-century French poet, chansonnier, playwright and goguettier.

upright=1Shaped poem by Panard[2]
  • 1731: Le Tour de Carnaval, comedy in 1 act and in prose
  • 1737: Les Acteurs déplacés, comédy in 1 act and in prose
  • 1744: Les Fêtes sincères et l'heureux retour, comedy in 1 act in free verse
  • 1744: Pygmalion, one-act opéra comique
  • 1744: Roland, one-act opéra comique
  • 1746: Le Magasin des modernes, one-act opéra comique
  • 1747: L'Impromotu des acteurs, comedy in 1 act in free verse
  • 1747: Les Tableaux, comedy in 1 act in free verse
  • 1754: Zéphir et Fleurette, one-act opéra-comique, with Pierre Laujon and Charles-Simon Favart, (parody of Zélindor by François-Augustin de Paradis de Moncrif)
  • 1757: Le Nouvelliste dupé, one-act opéra comique
  • 1762: L'Écosseuse, one-act opéra comique, with Louis Anseaume, (parody of L'Écossaise by Voltaire)
Panard's glass, iconic relic of the Société du Caveau

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