Hilaire-Bernard de Longepierre
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18 October 1659
Hilaire-Bernard de Longepierre | |
|---|---|
| Born | Hilaire Bernard de Requeleyne 18 October 1659 Dijon, Province of Burgundy, France |
| Died | 26 March 1721 (aged 61) Paris, France |
| Occupation | Playwright |
Hilaire-Bernard de Requeleyne, baron de Longepierre (18 October 1659 – 30 March 1721) was a 17th–18th-century French playwright.
A child prodigy, quoted in Enfants célèbres by Baillet, Baron Longepierre began by giving translations of Greek poets accompanied by scholarly notes. The coldness and infidelity of these translations earned him the sarcasm of Jean-Baptiste Rousseau, who then mocked his trials at tragedies.
- If the bucolic style
- Denigrated him,
- He wants by the dramatic
- Be drawn
- From the rank of abject authors.
- Greeks live !
Longepierre's tragedies aimed in fact to regain the perfect purity of Greek theater. His best play, Medea (1694), was first greeted coldly but triumphed when it was revived in 1728 and every time a talented actress undertook the title role. This tragedy, devoid of love, has terrifying passages, but it is static and the style is hard, verbose and declamatory. Longepierre then gave Sesostris (1695) and Electra (1702) which had little performances.
Despite Rousseau's epigrams, Longepierre, who had a large fortune, enjoyed general respect and was preceptor to the Count of Toulouse, then to the Duke of Chartres, future regent of the kingdom, of which he became ordinary gentleman. He was also a private secretary of the Duke of Berry.