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53:, the son of a notary. He studied medicine and law but was drawn to neither calling. He was brought up to have liberal values, and throughout his life was proud of his native city, but according to one obituarist the bourgeois spirit of his surroundings did not appeal to him. At the age of 22 he began travelling and spent several years in Spain, Italy and later Switzerland, where he entered the Geneva Institute, studying Italian painting.
74:, under which press freedom was strictly curtailed. Liberal journalists like Fouquier had to exercise great ingenuity and wit to get their views across to their readers without falling foul of the authorities. As a colleague put it, "We did not have licence to say anything, or almost anything, yet we said everything, or almost everything – but it took talent".
142:. It was a happy marriage and Fouquier and the young Feydeau got on well. Later, when Feydeau was established as a playwright, Fouquier found himself reviewing his stepson's plays from time to time, and despite criticising aspects of some of them he was generally able to agree with his fellow reviewers about their merits.
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said of him, "Fouquier again took up his journalist's pen with an activity, an abundance, and a charm which perhaps no other contemporary journalist has been able to equal". His productivity became famous: he wrote for
Parisian and provincial papers, in the daily press and in weekly publications. He
30:, (1 September 1838 – 25 December 1901) was a French journalist, writer, playwright and politician. He wrote for many newspapers and journals, often pseudonymously but with a style recognisably his own. He was best known as the chief theatre critic of
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put it, ten lines of any of his columns were enough to make it obvious who the author was. He wrote some plays, but they made little impression. The nearest he came to a success as a dramatist was with
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insurrection in
Marseille. After this he was appointed director of press affairs at the Ministry of the Interior. He left the post on 24 May 1873, following the fall of
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département. He was a poor orator, made little impression in the
Chamber and willingly stood down after one term and returned to journalism. After the death of
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Despite his success as a journalist, Fouquier hankered after a political career. He unsuccessfully sought election in
Bouches-du-RhĂ´ne to the
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was 38 performances (one of the longer runs at a house where short runs were the norm.) He was twice a candidate for membership of the
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fighting for
Italian Independence. Back in France, following the fall of the Empire in 1870 he was appointed secretary general of the
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wrote on all sorts of topics, from politics to philosophy, articles of pure fantasy and on rigorously scientific subjects.
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Attracted by journalism he moved to Paris in 1861, where he wrote for several newspapers, such as the
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Fouquier contributed to a range of publications, often under pen names, including "Spectator" in
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after a short illness and an unsuccessful operation, and was buried in the
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In 1876 Fouquier married Lodzia, known as "LĂ©ocadie", Feydeau, widow of
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Fouquier returned to journalism in Paris. The
English newspaper
422:, Cimetières de France et d'ailleurs". Retrieved 13 April 2021
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Fouquier died on
Christmas Day 1901 in a nursing home in
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375:, 3 December 1892, p. 8; and Noël and Stoullig, p. 321
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371:, 1 December 1892, p. 3; "The Drama in Paris",
479:Les Annales du théâtre et de la musique, 1896
460:Les Annales du théâtre et de la musique, 1894
302:Journal des débats politiques et littéraires
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157:in 1891 he became chief theatre critic of
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457:Noël, Edouard; Edmond Stoullig (1895).
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338:Fouquier, Henry. " Lés Théâtres",
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463:(in French). Paris: Charpentier.
530:19th-century French male writers
482:(in French). Paris: Ollendorff.
442:(in French). Paris: Flammarion.
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520:19th-century French journalists
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28:Jacques François Henry Fouquier
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228:Notes, references and sources
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298:"Mort de M. Henry Fouquier"
77:In 1867 Fouquier went with
49:Henry Fouquier was born in
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83:Expedition of the Thousand
23:Fouquier in his last years
476:Stoullig, Edmond (1897).
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525:French male journalists
367:"Le Soirée Théâtrale",
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320:, 4 January 1902, p. 20
505:Writers from Marseille
384:"The Drama in Paris",
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436:Gidel, Henry (1991).
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184:and "Nestor" in the
58:Courrier du Dimanche
316:"Literary Gossip",
147:Chamber of Deputies
207:Académie française
203:Théâtre de l'Odéon
176:Courrier de France
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92:, and then acting
79:Giuseppe Garibaldi
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449:978-2-08-066280-4
218:Neuilly-sur-Seine
178:, "Colombine" in
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420:"Henry Fouquier"
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168:L'Événement
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45:Early years
499:Categories
238:References
224:in Paris.
488:172996346
469:172996346
369:Le Figaro
356:Le Figaro
348:Le Figaro
340:Le Figaro
286:The Times
199:La Modèle
190:, but as
160:Le Figaro
127:The Times
98:communard
63:La Presse
51:Marseille
33:Le Figaro
264:Le Temps
193:Le Temps
181:Gil Blas
174:and the
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386:The Era
373:The Era
94:prefect
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484:OCLC
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444:ISBN
66:and
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