Eugène-Marin Labiche

born May 5,
1815, Paris, France
died Jan. 23, 1888, Paris
comic playwright who wrote many of the most
popular and amusing light comedies of the
19th-century French stage.
Born into
the bourgeois class that was to provide him
with the social setting for most of his
works, Labiche read for the bar and then
briefly worked as a journalist before
turning to writing fiction. In 1838 he
published a novel, La Clef des champs (“The
Key to the Fields”). Of his early plays,
Monsieur de Coislin (1838), written in
collaboration with Marc Michel, was his
first great success. A long series of
hilarious full-length and one-act plays
followed. Written together with other
authors, these works were presented mostly
at the Palais-Royal, the home of light
comedy. Typically, the plays are based on an
improbable incident evolving into an
imbroglio that brings out the folly and
frailty of the characters. The best of his
works include Le Chapeau de paille d’Italie
(1851; The Italian Straw Hat), which
inspired René Clair’s classic film of the
same name (1927); Le Misanthrope et
l’Auvergnat (1852); Le Voyage de M.
Perrichon (1860; The Journey of Mr.
Perrichon); and La Poudre aux yeux (1861;
“The Bluff”).
Though full
of dramatic devices, Labiche’s plays
nonetheless show real insight into human
nature. When his plays were first presented,
the exaggerated and slapstick style of his
favourite actors—such as Jean Geoffroy, for
whom many of the parts were written—somewhat
obscured the delightfully precise
delineations of character. With the
publication of his Théâtre complet, 10 vol.
(1878–83) while he was in retirement,
Labiche was engulfed by renewed acclaim and
success, including election to the Académie
Française in 1880. Sound and entertaining,
his works raised the lowly farce to a much
higher level of literary accomplishment.