Émile Fabre


Émile Fabre was a French playwright and general administrator of the Comédie-Française from 1915 to
1936.:227 He was greatly influenced by Balzac as a young man, and most of his best-known plays deal with the sacrifice of personal happiness to the pursuit of wealth. He also wrote the libretto for Xavier Leroux's opera Les cadeaux de Noël which was a great success when it premiered in Paris in 1915.

Career at the Comédie-Française

Fabre was appointed general administrator of the Comédie-Française on 2 December 1915.:227 According to Susan McCready,
During Fabre's tenure, the Comédie-Française moved from the center of the theatre scene, where theatrical creation and innovation are paramount, to its periphery, where its role was increasingly limited to the preservation of the past.:2
In 1922 he organised the Cycle Moliere, in which all of Moliere's plays were performed in chronological order.:231
The success of this event, encouraged him to organise the Centennial of Romanticism in 1927, the 100-year anniversary of Victor Hugo's Preface de Cromwell.:232 Over the course of the Centennial the theatre staged twenty-one Romantic plays.
He resigned from the position 15 October 1936.:227

Plays

Fabre's plays include: