Amable Bapaume

Amable Bapaume
Born 26 March 1825
Yvetot
Died 7 July 1898(1898-07-07) (aged 73)
Paris
Occupation Writer
Playwright
Journalist

Amable Bapaume (26 March 1825 – 7 July 1895) was an 19th-century French novelist, journalist and playwright.

Biography

For several years, Bapaume was a teacher in Paris at the collège Sainte-Barbe and the institution Massin. In 1847, he published a first novel, Juana la Lionne. In the 1860s, under the pen name "Henri Normand", he had several comédies en vaudeville published, most of them written in collaboration with Jean-Louis-Auguste Commerson, then director of le Tintamarre. Having abandoned teaching, Bapaume contributed a number of humorous articles to this newspaper, including a series of Medallions etching which earned him some trouble with certain fellow of actresses of whom he had drawn very unflattering portraits.[1]

When Commerson sold the Tintamarre to Touchatout and revived the Tam-Tam[2] in 1872, Bapaume followed him and wrote there articles under the name "Commodore". Like the Tintamarre, the Tam-Tam was "the newspaper of choice for the insane fantasy and jokes with punch.[1]" This unbridled imagination and cheerfully mocking tone are found in La Rome tintamarresque, histoire drolatique et anecdotique de Rome depuis sa fondation jusqu'au moyen âge et de Napoléon Ier, histoire tamtamarresque du grand homme, that Bapaume published between 1870 and 1872. After he became both the owner and chief editor of the Tam-Tam after Commerson died in 1879, he continued to publish novels into old age.

Works

Theatre[3]
Varia

References

  1. 1 2 Jules Lermina, Dictionnaire universel illustré biographique et bibliographique de la France contemporaine, Paris : L. Boulanger, 1885, p. 97.
  2. Newspaper established by Commerson and Jules Lovy in 1840.
  3. According to A. de Gubernatis, Bapaume may also have written unpublished theatre plays, Le Double Deux and La Folie dans le pétrin, two comédies en vaudeville in collaboration with Commerson and presented at the Théâtre Déjazet; Les Premières Armes de Citrouillard, two-act comedy; La Lionne et le Philistin, four-act comedy, and Service de nuit, vaudeville, written in collaboration with the chansonnier Paul Avenel.

Sources

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