Jean Castaing (playwright)

For other uses, see Castaing.
For the French engineer, see Jean Castaing.

Jean Castaing (1723, Alençon – March 1805, Alençon) was an 18th-century French poet, playwright and printer.

Biography

Both an author, typographer, or bookbinder, Castaing who by profession was collector of the taille in his hometown, is the author of several plays printed by himself in his print shop. This collection, whose plays have been described as "as bad as misprinted", has no other merit than its rarity. The author says ingenuously in his preface that by printing 30 copies of his theater, "he had no other purpose than to distract himself, without the annoyance to bother over thirty people". According to the same preface, it seems that this theater was to consist of four volumes, unless one counts for the fourth volume la Femme curieuse, printed in 1793, and which is part of Volume III. Because of this, his poetry and theater are extremely rare. The local historian Léon de La Sicotière had his complete theatrical and poetic productions, printed to a very small number of copies in his rich library. Several of Castaing's plays have been performed on the stage of Alencon.

Founder of the Alençonnaise Masonic lodge ("Saint-Louis-des-Cœurs-Zélés"), in 1752, he represented the masonry from Orne at the creation of the Grand Orient de France in 1773.

Works

References

  1. Bibliothèque dramatique de Monsieur de Soleinne. Catalog established by P. L. Jacob, bibliophile. Paris, Alliance des Arts, 1843-1845, 6 vol.

Sources

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