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Le Bourgeois gentilhomme

comedy-ballet by Molière
directed by Valérie Lesort and Christian Hecq
Saison 2025-2026
Du 31 January au 8 March
Durée 2.20
Lieu Porte Saint-Martin
Le Bourgeois gentilhomme
The duo Valérie Lesort and Christian Hecq presents a dazzling version of 'The Bourgeois Gentleman,' set to the lively pace of Balkan music.

Discover the play

  • “Turqueries" were in fashion in 1670 when Molière wrote this comedy for a lavish royal occasion. It excelled both in the representation of the exoticism in vogue at the time, and in its caricature of a middle-class social climber keen to adopt the good manners that are the hallmark of “quality people”. The entire stage is taken over by the flighty behaviour of this man who clumsily practices dancing and fencing, or tries to learn philosophy with childish simplicity. His wife and maid are the first to make fun of him, objecting to his increasingly authoritarian stance, especially when he refuses to give his daughter’s hand to Cléonte because he is not a noble. The mockery is further intensified thanks to the valet’s ruse of introducing the lover into the family home disguised as a “great Turk”, offering a crowd-pleasing finale with the Mamamouchi scene.
    Valérie Lesort and Christian Hecq happily make use of everything that feeds the eccentricity of this Monsieur Jourdain, frantically attracted to all things royal: “He is boundlessly naive and this naivety is particularly touching. Like many artists, we work with child audiences and Molière makes his Bourgeois a child playing pretend.” This show for all audiences is replete with poetic charm and childhood games madness.

    This show premiered on January 18, 2021 at the Salle Richelieu

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    In Molière’s time, the repertoire was not limited to spoken theatre. In the comedy-ballet Le Bourgeois gentilhomme, first performed in 1670, for the court at the Château de Chambord, theatre combines with dance and the music composed by Jean-Baptiste Lully. After the premiere (1680), the Comédie-Française continued to perform the play with its interludes of singing and dancing, thanks to the multi-talented actors of the Troupe. In the eighteenth century, there were even actors from the troupe put in charge of ballet choreography. Because no effort was spared when it came to the audience’s enjoyment, the budgets for comedy-ballets and other popular light comedies concluding with entertainments reached new heights and required the official creation of a ballet master. Due to its cost, the position was abolished in 1799, after musical plays died out during the Revolution.

    The Opera and the Comédie-Française then began to collaborate more frequently in the nineteenth century, which was particularly beneficial to Molière’s comedy-ballets, which were the most frequently performed pieces at the time (Le Malade imaginaire and Le Bourgeois gentilhomme). From 1948 onwards, in particular, they benefited from sumptuous productions, notably Le Bourgeois gentilhomme, staged in 1951 with a preciously preserved set, and then on the occasion of two tercentenaries, that of Molière’s death (1973) and that of the founding of the Comédie-Française (1980).

    The interweaving of theatre with dance and/or opera initiated by Molière has resulted in a multiplicity of outcomes on the stage of the Comédie-Française since the middle of the twentieth century, with the vaudevillian Feydeau and the satirist Brecht (The Threepenny Opera) entering the repertoire, the production of new choreographic performances (Signature, L’Autre), cabarets (since 2008) or a show that recreates a recording session (Comme une pierre qui...). The last production of Le Bourgeois gentilhomme at the Comédie-Française dates back to 2000.

    • Bourgeois gentilhomme, 1986, © photo. Claude Gafner / Coll. Comédie-Française
  • Direction: Valérie Lesort and Christian Hecq
    Scenography: Éric Ruf
    Costumes: Vanessa Sannino
    Lighting: Pascal Laajili
    Original music and arrangements: Mich Ochowiak and Ivica Bogdanić
    Choreographic work: Rémi Boissy
    Puppets: Carole Allemand and Valérie Lesort
    Assistant direction: Florimond Plantier
    Assistant scenography: Julie Camus
    Assistant costumes: Claire Fayel

Casting

  • Véronique Vella
    Nicole, servante ; Élève du Maître de musique et manipulation de marionnettes
    Sylvia Bergé
    Mme Jourdain, femme de M. Jourdain et Musicienne, chant
    alexandre plavloff
    Covielle, valet de Cléonte et le Mufti
    françoise gillard
    Dorimène, marquise et Danseuse
    christian hecq
    M. Jourdain, bourgeois
    nicolas lormeau
    Maître de musique et manipulation de marionnettes
    didier sandre
    Maître de philosophie
    Julien Frison
    Dorante, comte, amant de Dorimène
    clement bresson
    Maître d’armes et manipulation de marionnettes
    baptiste chabauty
    Cléonte, amoureux de Lucile ; Musicien, percussions et manipulation de marionnettes
    morgane real
    Lucile, fille de M. Jourdain et Danseuse
    Axel Auriant
    Maître à danser et Maître tailleur
  • Melchior Burin des Roziers
    Laquais ; Garçons tailleurs et manipulation de marionnettes
    Gabriel Draper
    Laquais ; Garçons tailleurs et manipulation de marionnettes
  • and the musicians and the dancer:

    Ivica Bogdanić: Musician, accordion, percussion
    Rémi Boissy: Dancer; Tailor boy and puppet manipulation
    Julien Oury: Musician, trombone, tuba
    Alon Peylet: Musician, trombone, trumpet, tuba
    Victor Rahola: Musician, helicon
    Martin Saccardy: Musician, trumpet