Pierrot Lunaire Ensemble 1912
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Pierrot ( , , ) is a
stock character A stock character, also known as a character archetype, is a fictional character in a work of art such as a novel, play, or a film whom audiences recognize from frequent recurrences in a particular literary tradition. There is a wide range of st ...
of
pantomime Pantomime (; informally panto) is a type of musical comedy stage production designed for family entertainment. It was developed in England and is performed throughout the United Kingdom, Ireland and (to a lesser extent) in other English-speaking ...
and ''
commedia dell'arte (; ; ) was an early form of professional theatre, originating from Italian theatre, that was popular throughout Europe between the 16th and 18th centuries. It was formerly called Italian comedy in English and is also known as , , and . Charact ...
'', whose origins are in the late seventeenth-century Italian troupe of players performing in Paris and known as the
Comédie-Italienne Comédie-Italienne or Théâtre-Italien are French names which have been used to refer to Italian-language theatre and opera when performed in France. The earliest recorded visits by Italian players were commedia dell'arte companies employed b ...
. The name is a
diminutive A diminutive is a root word that has been modified to convey a slighter degree of its root meaning, either to convey the smallness of the object or quality named, or to convey a sense of intimacy or endearment. A (abbreviated ) is a word-formati ...
of ''Pierre'' (Peter), via the suffix '' -ot.'' His character in contemporary popular culture — in poetry, fiction, and the visual arts, as well as works for the stage, screen, and concert hall — is that of the sad clown, often pining for love of Columbine, who usually breaks his heart and leaves him for
Harlequin Harlequin (; it, Arlecchino ; lmo, Arlechin, Bergamasque dialect, Bergamasque pronunciation ) is the best-known of the ''zanni'' or comic servant characters from the Italian language, Italian ''commedia dell'arte'', associated with the city o ...
. Performing unmasked, with a whitened face, he wears a loose white blouse with large buttons and wide white pantaloons. Sometimes he appears with a frilled collaret and a hat, usually with a close-fitting crown and wide round brim and, more rarely, with a conical shape like a dunce's cap. Pierrot's character developed from being a buffoon to an avatar of the disenfranchised. Many cultural movements found him amenable to their respective causes: Decadents turned him into a disillusioned foe of idealism; Symbolists saw him as a lonely fellow-sufferer;
Modernists Modernism is both a philosophy, philosophical and arts movement that arose from broad transformations in Western world, Western society during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The movement reflected a desire for the creation of new fo ...
made him into a silent, alienated observer of the mysteries of the human condition. Much of that mythic quality ("I'm Pierrot," said
David Bowie David Robert Jones (8 January 194710 January 2016), known professionally as David Bowie ( ), was an English singer-songwriter and actor. A leading figure in the music industry, he is regarded as one of the most influential musicians of the ...
: "I'm Everyman")Jean Rook
"Waiting for Bowie, and finding a genius who insists he's really a clown"
, ''Daily Express'', 5 May 1976.
still adheres to the "sad clown" in the
postmodern Postmodernism is an intellectual stance or mode of discourseNuyen, A.T., 1992. The Role of Rhetorical Devices in Postmodernist Discourse. Philosophy & Rhetoric, pp.183–194. characterized by skepticism toward the " grand narratives" of moderni ...
era.


Origins: seventeenth century

Pierrot is sometimes said to be a French variant of the sixteenth-century Italian
Pedrolino Pedrolino is a ''primo zanni'', or comic servant, of the ''Commedia dell'Arte''; the name is a hypocorism of ''Pedro'' (Peter), via the suffix ''-lino''. The character made its first appearance in the last quarter of the 16th century, apparently ...
, but the two types have little but their names ("Little Pete") and social stations in common. Both are comic servants, but Pedrolino, as a so-called first ''
zanni Zanni (), Zani or Zane is a character type of commedia dell'arte best known as an astute servant and a trickster. The Zanni comes from the countryside and is known to be a "dispossessed immigrant worker".Rudlin, John. ''Commedia dell'arte: An Act ...
'', often acts with cunning and daring, an engine of the plot in the
scenario In the performing arts, a scenario (, ; ; ) is a synoptical collage of an event or series of actions and events. In the ''commedia dell'arte'', it was an outline of entrances, exits, and action describing the plot of a play, and was literally pi ...
s where he appears. Pierrot, on the other hand, as a "second" ''zanni'', stands "on the periphery of the action." He dispenses advice and courts his master's young daughter, Columbine, bashfully. His origins among the Italian players in France go back to
Molière Jean-Baptiste Poquelin (, ; 15 January 1622 (baptised) – 17 February 1673), known by his stage name Molière (, , ), was a French playwright, actor, and poet, widely regarded as one of the greatest writers in the French language and world ...
's peasant Pierrot in '' Don Juan, or The Stone Guest'' (1665). In 1673, the Comédie-Italienne made its own contribution to the Don Juan legend with an ''Addendum to "The Stone Guest''", which included Molière's Pierrot. Thereafter the character—sometimes a peasant, but more often now an Italianate "second" ''zanni''—appeared fairly regularly in the Italians' offerings, his role always taken by one Giuseppe Giaratone (or Geratoni, fl. 1639-1697). Among the French dramatists writing roles for Pierrot were Jean de Palaprat, Claude-Ignace Brugière de Barante,
Antoine Houdar de la Motte Antoine Houdar de la Motte (18 January 167226 December 1731) was a French author. De la Motte was born and died in Paris. In 1693 his comedy, ''Les Originaux'' (Les originaux, ou, l'Italien), was a complete failure, and so depressed the author ...
, and
Jean-François Regnard Jean-François Regnard (7 February 1655 – 4 September 1709), "the most distinguished, after Molière, of the comic poets of the seventeenth century", was a dramatist, born in Paris, who is equally famous now for the travel diary he kept of a vo ...
. They present him as an anomaly among busy social personalities around him. Columbine laughs at his advances; his masters who are in pursuit of pretty young wives brush off his warnings to act their age. His isolation bears the pathos of
Watteau Jean-Antoine Watteau (, , ; baptised October 10, 1684died July 18, 1721) Alsavailablevia Oxford Art Online (subscription needed). was a French painter and draughtsman whose brief career spurred the revival of interest in colour and movement, as ...
's portraits.


Eighteenth century


France

An Italian company was called back to Paris in 1716, and Pierrot was reincarnated by the actors Pierre-François Biancolelli (son of the Harlequin of the banished troupe of players) and, after Biancolelli abandoned the role, the celebrated
Fabio Sticotti Fabio Sticotti (Friuli, Northern Italy 1676 – Paris, 5 December 1741) was an 18th-century Parisian comic actor. The husband of opera singer Ursula Astori, he arrived in Paris in 1716 and began acting only in 1733, in the role of Pantalone. He wa ...
(1676–1741) and his son Antoine Jean (1715–1772). But the character seems to have been regarded as unimportant by this company, since he appears infrequently in its new plays. The character appeared often in the eighteenth century on Parisian stages. Sometimes he spoke gibberish, sometimes the audience itself sang his lines, inscribed on placards held aloft. He could appears as a valet, a cook, or an adventurer; his character is not strictly defined." In the 1720s, Pierrot came into his own. In plays like ''Trophonius's Cave'' (1722) and ''The Golden Ass'' (1725), one meets an engaging Pierrot. The accomplished comic actor Jean-Baptiste Hamoche portrayed him with success. After 1733, he rarely appears in new plays. Pierrot also appeared in the visual arts and in folksongs ("
Au clair de la lune "" (, ) is a French folk song of the 18th century. Its composer and lyricist are unknown. Its simple melody () is commonly taught to beginners learning an instrument. Lyrics The song appears as early as 1820 i''Le Voiture Verseés'' with only ...
"). The art of
Claude Gillot Claude Gillot (April 27, 1673 – May 4, 1722) was a French painter, print-maker and illustrator, best known as the master of Watteau and Lancret. Life Gillot was born in Langres. He was a painter, engraver, book illustrator, metal worker, and ...
(''Master André's Tomb'' . 1717, of Gillot's students Watteau (''Italian Actors'' . 1719 and
Nicolas Lancret Nicolas Lancret (22 January 1690 – 14 September 1743) was a French painter. Born in Paris, he was a brilliant depicter of light comedy which reflected the tastes and manners of French society during the regency of the Duke of Orleans and, late ...
(''Italian Actors near a Fountain'' . 1719, of
Jean-Baptiste Oudry Jean-Baptiste Oudry (; 17 March 1686 – 30 April 1755) was a French Rococo painter, engraver, and tapestry designer. He is particularly well known for his naturalistic pictures of animals and his hunt pieces depicting game. His son, Jacques-Ch ...
(''Italian Actors in a Park'' . 1725, of
Philippe Mercier Philippe Mercier (also spelled Philip Mercier; 1689 – 18 July 1760) was an artist of French Huguenot descent from the German realm of Brandenburg-Prussia (later Kingdom of Prussia), usually defined to French school. Active in England for mos ...
(''Pierrot and Harlequin'' .d., and of
Jean-Honoré Fragonard Jean-Honoré Fragonard (; 5 April 1732 (birth/baptism certificate) – 22 August 1806) was a French painter and printmaker whose late Rococo manner was distinguished by remarkable facility, exuberance, and hedonism. One of the most prolific ar ...
(''A Boy as Pierrot'' 776–1780 features him prominently.


England

As early as 1673, just months after Pierrot had made his debut in the ''Addendum to "The Stone Guest''",
Scaramouche Scaramouche () or Scaramouch (; from Italian Scaramuccia , literally "little skirmisher") is a stock clown character of the 16th-century commedia dell'arte (comic theatrical arts of Italian literature). The role combined characteristics of the ...
Tiberio Fiorilli and a troupe assembled from the Comédie-Italienne entertained Londoners with selections from their Parisian repertoire. And in 1717, Pierrot's name first appears in an English entertainment: a
pantomime Pantomime (; informally panto) is a type of musical comedy stage production designed for family entertainment. It was developed in England and is performed throughout the United Kingdom, Ireland and (to a lesser extent) in other English-speaking ...
by
John Rich John Rich (born January 7, 1974) is an American country music singer-songwriter. From 1992 to 1998, he was a member of the country music band Lonestar, in which he played bass guitar and alternated with Richie McDonald as lead vocalist. After d ...
entitled ''The Jealous Doctor; or, The Intriguing Dame''. Thereafter, until the end of the century, Pierrot appeared fairly regularly in English pantomimes (which were originally mute
harlequinade ''Harlequinade'' is a British comic theatrical genre, defined by the ''Oxford English Dictionary'' as "that part of a pantomime in which the harlequin and clown play the principal parts". It developed in England between the 17th and mid-19th cent ...
s; in the nineteenth century, the harlequinade was a "play within a play" during the pantomime), finding his most notable interpreter in
Carlo Delpini Carlo Antonio Delpini (died 1828) was an Italian pantomimist and theatrical manager. Life Born in Rome, Delpini was a pupil of Nicolini. About 1774 he was engaged by David Garrick for the Drury Lane Theatre. There, at Covent Garden Theatre, and ...
(1740–1828). Delpini, according to the popular-theater historian, M. Willson Disher, "kept strictly to the idea of a creature so stupid as to think that if he raised his leg level with his shoulder he could use it as a gun." Pierrot was later displaced by the English
clown A clown is a person who performs comedy and arts in a state of open-mindedness using physical comedy, typically while wearing distinct makeup or costuming and reversing folkway-norms. History The most ancient clowns have been found in ...
.


Denmark

In 1800, a troupe of Italian players led by Pasquale Casorti performed in
Dyrehavsbakken (), commonly referred to as (), is an amusement park in Lyngby-Taarbæk Kommune, Denmark, near Klampenborg (Gentofte municipality), about north of central Copenhagen. It opened in and is the world's oldest operating amusement park. With 2. ...
. Casorti's son, Giuseppe (1749–1826), began appearing as Pierrot in pantomimes, which now had a formulaic plot structure. Pierrot is still a fixture at Bakken, at nearby
Tivoli Gardens Tivoli Gardens, also known simply as Tivoli, is an amusement park and pleasure garden in Copenhagen, Denmark. The park opened on 15 August 1843 and is the third-oldest operating amusement park in the world, after Dyrehavsbakken in nearby Klampe ...
and
Tivoli Friheden Tivoli Friheden is an amusement park located in Aarhus, Denmark. The park was visited by more than 365,000 visitors in 2009, and the figure is rising. The park is situated about 2 km to the south of the city centre. It has several themed ...
in
Aarhus Aarhus (, , ; officially spelled Århus from 1948 until 1 January 2011) is the second-largest city in Denmark and the seat of Aarhus Municipality. It is located on the eastern shore of Jutland in the Kattegat sea and approximately northwest ...
.


Germany

Ludwig Tieck Johann Ludwig Tieck (; ; 31 May 177328 April 1853) was a German poet, fiction writer, translator, and critic. He was one of the founding fathers of the Romantic movement in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Early life Tieck was born in Be ...
's ''The Topsy-Turvy World'' (1798) is an early—and highly successful—example of the introduction of the ''commedia dell'arte'' characters into
parodic A parody, also known as a spoof, a satire, a send-up, a take-off, a lampoon, a play on (something), or a caricature, is a creative work designed to imitate, comment on, and/or mock its subject by means of satiric or ironic imitation. Often its subj ...
metatheater Metatheatre, and the closely related term metadrama, describes the aspects of a play that draw attention to its nature as drama or theatre, or to the circumstances of its performance. "Breaking the Fourth Wall" is an example of a metatheatrical dev ...
. (Pierrot is a member of the audience watching the play.)


Spain

The penetration of Pierrot and his companions of the ''commedia'' into Spain is documented in a painting by
Goya Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes (; ; 30 March 174616 April 1828) was a Spanish romantic painter and printmaker. He is considered the most important Spanish artist of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. His paintings, drawings, and ...
, ''Itinerant Actors'' (1793). It foreshadows the work of such Spanish successors as
Picasso Pablo Ruiz Picasso (25 October 1881 – 8 April 1973) was a Spanish painter, sculptor, printmaker, ceramicist and Scenic design, theatre designer who spent most of his adult life in France. One of the most influential artists of the 20th ce ...
and Fernand Pelez, both of whom also showed strong sympathy with the lives of traveling
saltimbanco ''Saltimbanco'' was a touring show by Cirque du Soleil. ''Saltimbanco'' ran from 1992 to 2006 in its original form, performed under a large circus tent called the Grand Chapiteau; its last performance in that form was in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, ...
s.


Nineteenth century


Pantomime of Deburau at the Théâtre des Funambules

The
Théâtre des Funambules The Théâtre des Funambules ('The Theatre of the Tightrope-Walkers') was a former theater located on the boulevard du Temple in Paris, sometimes called the Boulevard du Crime. It was located between the prominent Théâtre de la Gaîté, and th ...
was a little theater licensed in its early years to present only mimed and acrobatic acts. It was the home, beginning in 1816, of
Jean-Gaspard Deburau Jean-Gaspard Deburau (born Jan Kašpar Dvořák; 31 July 1796 – 17 June 1846), sometimes erroneously called Debureau, was a Bohemian-French Mime artist, mime. He performed from 1816 to the year of his death at the Théâtre des Funambule ...
(1796–1846), the most famous Pierrot ever. He was immortalized by
Jean-Louis Barrault Jean-Louis Bernard Barrault (; 8 September 1910 – 22 January 1994) was a French actor, director and mime artist who worked on both screen and stage. Biography Barrault was born in Le Vésinet in France in 1910. His father was 'a Burgundia ...
in
Marcel Carné Marcel Albert Carné (; 18 August 1906 – 31 October 1996) was a French film director. A key figure in the poetic realism movement, Carné's best known films include '' Port of Shadows'' (1938), ''Le Jour Se Lève'' (1939), '' The Devil's Envoys ...
's film ''
Children of Paradise ''Children of Paradise'' (original French title: ''Les Enfants du Paradis'') is a two-part French romantic drama film by Marcel Carné, produced under war conditions in 1943, 1944, and early 1945 in both Vichy France and Occupied France. Set in ...
'' (1945). Deburau, from the year 1825, was the only actor at the Funambules to play Pierrot, and he did so in several types of pantomime: rustic, melodramatic, "realistic", and fantastic. His style, according to
Louis Péricaud Louis Jean Péricaud (10 June 1835, La Rochelle – 12 November 1909, Paris) was a 19th-century French stage actor, chansonnier, playwright, theatre historian and theatre director. He was the father of actress Berthe Jalabert (1858–c.1935) and ...
, formed "an enormous contrast with the exuberance, the superabundance of gestures, of leaps, that ... his predecessors had employed." He altered the costume: he dispensed with the frilled collaret, substituted a skullcap for a hat, and greatly increased the wide cut of both blouse and trousers. Deburau's Pierrot avoided the crude Pierrots—timid, sexless, lazy, and greedy— found in earlier pantomime. The Funambules Pierrot appealed to audiences in the faery-tale style which incorporoate the ''commedia'' types. The plot often hinged on Cassander's pursuit of Harlequin and Columbine, having to deal with a clever and ambiguous Pierrot. Deburau early—about 1828—caught the attention of the
Romantics Romanticism (also known as the Romantic movement or Romantic era) was an artistic, literary, musical, and intellectual movement that originated in Europe towards the end of the 18th century, and in most areas was at its peak in the approximate ...
. In 1842, Théophile Gautier published a fake review of a "Shakespeare" pantomime he claimed to have seen at the Funambules. It placed Pierrot in the company of over-reachers in high literature like
Don Juan Don Juan (), also known as Don Giovanni (Italian), is a legendary, fictional Spanish libertine who devotes his life to seducing women. Famous versions of the story include a 17th-century play, '' El burlador de Sevilla y convidado de piedra'' ...
or
Macbeth ''Macbeth'' (, full title ''The Tragedie of Macbeth'') is a tragedy by William Shakespeare. It is thought to have been first performed in 1606. It dramatises the damaging physical and psychological effects of political ambition on those w ...
.


Pantomime after Baptiste: Charles Deburau, Paul Legrand, and their successors

Deburau's son,
Jean-Charles Jean-Charles and Jean-Carles is a French masculine given name. Notable people with the name include: * Jean Charles, Chevalier Folard (1669–1752), French soldier and military author * Jean-Charles Adolphe Alphand (1817–1891), French engineer * ...
(or, as he preferred, "Charles"
829–1873 8 (eight) is the natural number following 7 and preceding 9. In mathematics 8 is: * a composite number, its proper divisors being , , and . It is twice 4 or four times 2. * a power of two, being 2 (two cubed), and is the first number of t ...
, assumed Pierrot's blouse the year after his father died. Another important Pierrot of mid-century was Charles-Dominique-Martin Legrand, known as
Paul Legrand Paul Legrand (January 4, 1816 – April 16, 1898), born Charles-Dominique-Martin Legrand, was a highly regarded and influential French mime who turned the Pierrot of his predecessor, Jean-Gaspard Deburau, into the tearful, sentimental characte ...
(1816–1898; see photo at top of page). He began appearing at the Funambules as Pierrot in 1845. Legrand left the Funambules in 1853 for the Folies-Nouvelles, which attracted the fashionable set, unlike the Funambules' working-class audiences. Legrand often appeared in realistic costume, his chalky face his only concession to tradition, leading some advocates of pantomime, like Gautier, to lament that he was betraying the character of the type. Legrand's Pierrot influenced future mimes.


Pantomime and late nineteenth-century art


France

;Popular and literary pantomime In the 1880s and 1890s, the pantomime reached a kind of apogee, and Pierrot became ubiquitous. Moreover, he acquired a female counterpart, Pierrette, who rivaled Columbine for his affections. A Cercle Funambulesque was founded in 1888, and Pierrot (sometimes played by female mimes, such as Félicia Mallet) dominated its productions until its demise in 1898.
Sarah Bernhardt Sarah Bernhardt (; born Henriette-Rosine Bernard; 22 or 23 October 1844 – 26 March 1923) was a French stage actress who starred in some of the most popular French plays of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, including '' La Dame Aux Camel ...
even donned Pierrot's blouse for
Jean Richepin Jean Richepin (; 4 February 1849 – 12 December 1926) was a French poet, novelist and dramatist. Biography Son of an army doctor, Jean Richepin was born 4 February 1849 at Médéa, French Algeria. At school and at the École Normale Supér ...
's ''Pierrot the Murderer'' (1883). But French mimes and actors were not the only figures responsible for Pierrot's ubiquity: the English Hanlon brothers (sometimes called the
Hanlon-Lees {{Refimprove, date=March 2008 A group of pre-Vaudevillian acrobats founded in the early 1840s, the Hanlon-Lees were world-renowned practitioners of "entortillation" (an invented word based upon the French term '' entortillage'', which translates t ...
), gymnasts and acrobats who had been schooled in the 1860s in pantomimes from Baptiste's repertoire, traveled (and dazzled) the world well into the twentieth century with their pantomimic sketches and extravaganzas featuring riotously nightmarish Pierrots. The Naturalists
Émile Zola Émile Édouard Charles Antoine Zola (, also , ; 2 April 184029 September 1902) was a French novelist, journalist, playwright, the best-known practitioner of the literary school of naturalism, and an important contributor to the development of ...
especially, who wrote glowingly of them—were captivated by their art.
Edmond de Goncourt Edmond Louis Antoine Huot de Goncourt (; 26 May 182216 July 1896) was a French writer, literary critic, art critic, book publisher and the founder of the Académie Goncourt. Biography Goncourt was born in Nancy. His parents, Marc-Pierre Huot d ...
modeled his acrobat-mimes in his ''The Zemganno Brothers'' (1879) upon them;
J.-K. Huysmans Charles-Marie-Georges Huysmans (, ; 5 February 1848 – 12 May 1907) was a French novelist and art critic who published his works as Joris-Karl Huysmans (, variably abbreviated as J. K. or J.-K.). He is most famous for the novel '' À rebour ...
(whose ''
Against Nature Against Nature may refer to: * ''Against Nature'' (album) (1989), a rock album by The Fatima Mansions * ''Against Nature'', a 2015 album by Marc Almond * Against Nature?, a museum exhibition on homosexuality in animals * Against Nature (band), a ...
''
884 __NOTOC__ Year 884 ( DCCCLXXXIV) was a leap year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events By place Europe * March 1 – Diego Rodríguez Porcelos, count of Castile, founds and repo ...
would become
Dorian Gray ''The Picture of Dorian Gray'' is a philosophical novel by Irish writer Oscar Wilde. A shorter novella-length version was published in the July 1890 issue of the American periodical '' Lippincott's Monthly Magazine''.''The Picture of Dorian G ...
's bible) and his friend
Léon Hennique Léon Hennique (4 November 1850 – 25 December 1935) was a French naturalistic novelist and playwright. Life Léon Hennique was born in Basse-Terre, Guadeloupe, the son of the naval infantry officer Agathon Hennique. He studied painting, but ...
wrote their pantomime '' Pierrot the Skeptic'' (1881) after seeing them perform at the Folies Bergère. (And, in turn,
Jules Laforgue Jules Laforgue (; 16 August 1860 – 20 August 1887) was a Franco-Uruguayan poet, often referred to as a Symbolist poet. Critics and commentators have also pointed to Impressionism as a direct influence and his poetry has been called "part-symbo ...
wrote his pantomime ''Pierrot the Cut-Up'' 'Pierrot fumiste'', 1882after reading the scenario by Huysmans and Hennique.) It was in part through the enthusiasm that they excited, coupled with the
Impressionists Impressionism was a 19th-century art movement characterized by relatively small, thin, yet visible brush strokes, open Composition (visual arts), composition, emphasis on accurate depiction of light in its changing qualities (often accentuating ...
' taste for popular entertainment, like the circus and the music-hall, as well as the new bohemianism that then reigned in artistic quarters like
Montmartre Montmartre ( , ) is a large hill in Paris's northern 18th arrondissement. It is high and gives its name to the surrounding district, part of the Right Bank. The historic district established by the City of Paris in 1995 is bordered by Rue Ca ...
(and which was celebrated by such denizens as
Adolphe Willette Adolphe Léon Willette (30 July 1857, Châlons-sur-Marne4 February 1926, Paris) was a French Painting, painter, illustrator, caricaturist, and lithographer, as well as an architect of the famous Moulin Rouge cabaret. Willette ran as an "antisem ...
, whose cartoons and canvases are crowded with Pierrots)—it was through all this that Pierrot achieved almost unprecedented currency and visibility towards the end of the century. ;Visual arts, fiction, poetry, music, and film He invaded the visual arts—not only in the work of Willette, but also in the illustrations and posters of
Jules Chéret Jules Chéret (31 May 1836 – 23 September 1932) was a French painter and lithographer who became a master of ''Belle Époque'' poster art. He has been called the father of the modern poster. Early life and career Born in Paris to a poor but ...
; in the engravings of
Odilon Redon Odilon Redon (born Bertrand Redon; ; 20 April 18406 July 1916) was a French Symbolism (arts), symbolist painter, printmaker, Drawing, draughtsman and pastellist. Early in his career, both before and after fighting in the Franco-Prussian War, he ...
(''The Swamp Flower: A Sad Human Head''
885 Year 885 ( DCCCLXXXV) was a common year starting on Friday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events By place Europe * Summer – Emperor Charles the Fat summons a meeting of officials at Lobith (moder ...
; and in the canvases of
Georges Seurat Georges Pierre Seurat ( , , ; 2 December 1859 – 29 March 1891) was a French post-Impressionist artist. He devised the painting techniques known as chromoluminarism and pointillism and used conté crayon for drawings on paper with a rough su ...
(''Pierrot with a White Pipe man-Jean'
883 __NOTOC__ Year 883 ( DCCCLXXXIII) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events By place Europe * Spring – Viking raiders ravage Flanders, and sack the abbey at Saint- ...
''The Painter Aman-Jean as Pierrot''
883 __NOTOC__ Year 883 ( DCCCLXXXIII) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events By place Europe * Spring – Viking raiders ravage Flanders, and sack the abbey at Saint- ...
,
Léon Comerre Léon François Comerre (10 October 1850 – 20 February 1916) was a French Academic art, academic painter, famous for his portraits of beautiful women and Oriental themes. Life Comerre was born in Trélon, in the Nord (French department), ...
(''Pierrot''
884 __NOTOC__ Year 884 ( DCCCLXXXIV) was a leap year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events By place Europe * March 1 – Diego Rodríguez Porcelos, count of Castile, founds and repo ...
''Pierrot Playing the Mandolin''
884 __NOTOC__ Year 884 ( DCCCLXXXIV) was a leap year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events By place Europe * March 1 – Diego Rodríguez Porcelos, count of Castile, founds and repo ...
,
Henri Rousseau Henri Julien Félix Rousseau (; 21 May 1844 – 2 September 1910)
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,
Paul Cézanne Paul Cézanne ( , , ; ; 19 January 1839 – 22 October 1906) was a French artist and Post-Impressionism, Post-Impressionist painter whose work laid the foundations of the transition from the 19th-century conception of artistic endeavour to a ...
(''Mardi gras ierrot and Harlequin'
888 888 or triple eight may refer to: * 888 (number), an integer * 888 BC, a year of the 9th century BC * AD 888, a year of the Julian calendar * 888casino, an online casino * 888chan, an image board * 888 Holdings, an online gambling company, tradin ...
, Fernand Pelez (''Grimaces and Miseries'' a.k.a. ''The Saltimbanques''
888 888 or triple eight may refer to: * 888 (number), an integer * 888 BC, a year of the 9th century BC * AD 888, a year of the Julian calendar * 888casino, an online casino * 888chan, an image board * 888 Holdings, an online gambling company, tradin ...
,
Pablo Picasso Pablo Ruiz Picasso (25 October 1881 – 8 April 1973) was a Spanish painter, sculptor, printmaker, ceramicist and Scenic design, theatre designer who spent most of his adult life in France. One of the most influential artists of the 20th ce ...
(''Pierrot and Columbine''
900 __NOTOC__ Year 900 ( CM) was a leap year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events By place Abbasid Caliphate * Spring – Forces under the Transoxianian emir Isma'il ibn Ahmad are ...
,
Guillaume Seignac Guillaum Seignac (25 September 1870 – 2 October 1924) was a French academic painter. Childhood Guillaume was born in Rennes in 1870, and died in Paris in 1924. He started training at the Académie Julian in Paris, where he spent 1889 throug ...
(''Pierrot's Embrace''
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,
Théophile Steinlen Théophile Alexandre Steinlen (November 10, 1859 – December 13, 1923), was a Swiss-born French Art Nouveau painter and printmaker. Biography Born in Lausanne , neighboring_municipalities= Bottens, Bretigny-sur-Morrens, Chavannes-près-R ...
(''Pierrot and the Cat''
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, and
Édouard Vuillard Jean-Édouard Vuillard (; 11 November 186821 June 1940) was a French painter, decorative artist and printmaker. From 1891 through 1900, he was a prominent member of the Nabis, making paintings which assembled areas of pure color, and interior s ...
(''The Black Pierrot'' . 1890. The mime "Tombre" of
Jean Richepin Jean Richepin (; 4 February 1849 – 12 December 1926) was a French poet, novelist and dramatist. Biography Son of an army doctor, Jean Richepin was born 4 February 1849 at Médéa, French Algeria. At school and at the École Normale Supér ...
's novel ''Nice People'' (''Braves Gens''
886 __NOTOC__ Year 886 ( DCCCLXXXVI) was a common year starting on Saturday of the Julian calendar. Events By place Byzantine Empire * March – A wide-ranging conspiracy against Emperor Basil I, led by John Kourkouas, is uncovered. * ...
turned him into a pathetic and alcoholic "phantom";
Paul Verlaine Paul-Marie Verlaine (; ; 30 March 1844 – 8 January 1896) was a French poet associated with the Symbolist movement and the Decadent movement. He is considered one of the greatest representatives of the ''fin de siècle'' in international and ...
imagined him as a gormandizing naïf in "Pantomime" (1869), then, like Tombre, as a lightning-lit specter in "Pierrot" (1868, pub. 1882). Laforgue put three of the "complaints" of his first published volume of poems (1885) into "Lord" Pierrot's mouth—and dedicated his next book, '' The Imitation of Our Lady the Moon'' (1886), completely to Pierrot and his world. (Pierrots were legion among the minor, now-forgotten poets: for samples, see Willette's journal ''The Pierrot'', which appeared between 1888 and 1889, then again in 1891.) In the realm of song,
Claude Debussy (Achille) Claude Debussy (; 22 August 1862 – 25 March 1918) was a French composer. He is sometimes seen as the first Impressionist composer, although he vigorously rejected the term. He was among the most influential composers of the ...
set both Verlaine's "Pantomime" and Banville's "Pierrot" (1842) to music in 1881 (not published until 1926)—the only precedents among works by major composers being the "Pierrot" section of
Telemann Georg Philipp Telemann (; – 25 June 1767) was a German Baroque composer and multi-instrumentalist. Almost completely self-taught in music, he became a composer against his family's wishes. After studying in Magdeburg, Zellerfeld, and Hildesh ...
's ''Burlesque Overture'' (1717–22), Mozart's 1783 "Masquerade" (in which Mozart himself took the role of Harlequin and his brother-in-law, Joseph Lange, that of Pierrot), and the "Pierrot" section of Robert Schumann's ''Carnival'' (1835). Even the embryonic art of the motion picture turned to Pierrot before the century was out: he appeared, not only in early celluloid shorts (Georges Méliès's ''The Nightmare'' [1896], ''The Magician'' [1898]; Alice Guy's ''Arrival of Pierrette and Pierrot'' [1900], ''Pierrette's Amorous Adventures'' [1900]; Ambroise-François Parnaland's ''Pierrot's Big Head/Pierrot's Tongue'' [1900], ''Pierrot-Drinker''
900 __NOTOC__ Year 900 ( CM) was a leap year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events By place Abbasid Caliphate * Spring – Forces under the Transoxianian emir Isma'il ibn Ahmad are ...
, but also in Emile Reynaud's Praxinoscope production of ''Pauvre Pierrot, Poor Pierrot'' (1892), the first animated movie and the first hand-colored one.


Belgium

In Belgium, Félicien Rops depicted a grinning Pierrot who witnesses an unromantic backstage scene (''Blowing Cupid's Nose'' [1881]). James Ensor painted Pierrots obsessively, in various poses from prostrate to bowing his head in despondency, sometimes even with a smiling skeleton. The Belgian poet and dramatist Albert Giraud also identified with the ''zanni'': the fifty Rondel (poem), rondels of his ''Pierrot lunaire (book), Pierrot lunaire'' (''Moonstruck Pierrot,'' 1884) inspired generations of composers (see ''#Pierrot lunaire, Pierrot lunaire'' below), and his verse-play ''Pierrot-Narcissus'' (1887) offered a definitive portrait of the poet-dreamer. The choreographer Joseph Hansen (dancer), Joseph Hansen staged the ballet ''Macabre Pierrot'' in 1884 in collaboration with the poet Théodore Hannon, Théo Hannon.


England

Pierrot figured prominently in the drawings of Aubrey Beardsley, and various writers referenced him in their poetry. Ethel Wright painted ''Bonjour, Pierrot!'' (a greeting to a dour clown sitting disconsolate with his dog) in 1893. The Pierrot of popular taste also spawned a uniquely English entertainment. In 1891, the singer and banjoist Clifford Essex, resolved to create a troupe of English Pierrot entertainers, and called them the Concert Party (entertainment), seaside Pierrots who, as late as the 1950s, performed on the piers of Brighton, Margate, and Blackpool. They inspired the Will Morris Pierrots, named after their Birmingham founder. They originated in the Smethwick area in the late 1890s and played to large audiences in the Midlands. Walter Westley Russell committed these performers to canvas in ''The Pierrots'' (c. 1900). Pierrot's mask claimed the attention of the great theater innovator Edward Gordon Craig. Craig's involvement with the figure grew with time. In 1897, Craig, dressed as Pierrot, gave a quasi-impromptu stage-reading of Hans Christian Andersen's story "What the Moon Saw" as part of a benefit performance for theater artists in need.


Austria and Germany

Although he lamented that "the Pierrot figure was inherently alien to the German-speaking world", the playwright Franz Blei introduced him enthusiastically into his playlet ''The Kissy-Face: A Columbiade'' (1895), and his fellow-Austrians Richard Specht and Richard Beer-Hofmann made an effort to naturalize Pierrot—in their plays ''Pierrot-Hunchback'' (1896) and ''Pierrot-Hypnotist'' (1892, first pub. 1984), respectively—by linking his fortunes with those of Goethe's Faust. Still others among their countrymen simply sidestepped the issue of naturalization: Hermann Bahr took his inspiration for his ''Pantomime of the Good Man'' (1893) directly from his encounter with the exclusively French Cercle Funambulesque; Rudolf Holzer set the action of his ''Puppet Loyalty'' (1899), unapologetically, in a fabulous Paris; and Karl Michael von Levetzow settled his ''Two Pierrots'' (1900) in the birthplace of Pierrot's comedy, Italy. In Germany, Frank Wedekind introduced the ''femme-fatale'' of his first "Lulu" play, ''Earth Spirit (play), Earth Spirit'' (1895), in a Pierrot costume. In a similar spirit, the painter Paul Hoecker put cheeky young men into Pierrot costumes to ape their complacent burgher elders in ''Pierrots with Pipes'' (c. 1900) and swilling champagne in ''Waiting Woman'' (c. 1895).


Italy

Canio's Pagliaccio in the famous Pagliacci, opera (1892) by Leoncavallo is close enough to a Pierrot to deserve a mention here. Much less well-known is the work of two other composers—Mario Pasquale Costa and Vittorio Monti. Costa's pantomime ''L'Histoire d'un Pierrot'' (''Story of a Pierrot''), which debuted in Paris in 1893, was so admired in its day that it eventually reached audiences on several continents, was paired with ''Cavalleria Rusticana'' by New York's Metropolitan Opera Company in 1909, and was premiered as a film by Baldassarre Negroni in 1914. Its libretto, like that of Monti's "mimodrama" ''Noël de Pierrot'' a.k.a. ''A Clown's Christmas'' (1900), was written by Fernand Beissier, one of the founders of the Cercle Funambulesque. (Monti would go on to acquire his own fame by celebrating another spiritual outsider much akin to Pierrot—the Romani people, Gypsy. His ''Csárdás (Monti), Csárdás'' [c. 1904], like ''Pagliacci'', has found a secure place in the standard musical repertoire.) The portrait and Genre painting, genre painter Vittorio Matteo Corcos produced ''Portrait of Boy in Pierrot Costume'' in 1897.


Spain

In 1895, the playwright and future Nobel Prize in Literature, Nobel laureate Jacinto Benavente wrote rapturously in his journal of a performance of the
Hanlon-Lees {{Refimprove, date=March 2008 A group of pre-Vaudevillian acrobats founded in the early 1840s, the Hanlon-Lees were world-renowned practitioners of "entortillation" (an invented word based upon the French term '' entortillage'', which translates t ...
, and three years later he published his only pantomime: ''The Whiteness of Pierrot''. A true fin-de-siècle mask, Pierrot paints his face black to commit robbery and murder; then, after restoring his pallor, he hides himself, terrified of his own undoing, in a snowbank—forever. Thus does he forfeit his union with Columbine (the intended beneficiary of his crimes) for a frosty marriage with the moon.


North America

Pierrot and his fellow masks were late in coming to the United States, which, unlike England, Russia, and the countries of continental Europe, had had no early exposure to ''commedia dell'arte''. The
Hanlon-Lees {{Refimprove, date=March 2008 A group of pre-Vaudevillian acrobats founded in the early 1840s, the Hanlon-Lees were world-renowned practitioners of "entortillation" (an invented word based upon the French term '' entortillage'', which translates t ...
made their first U.S. appearance in 1858, and their subsequent tours, well into the twentieth century, of scores of cities throughout the country accustomed their audiences to their fantastic, acrobatic Pierrots. But the Pierrot that would leave the deepest imprint upon the American imagination was that of the French and English Decadents, a creature who quickly found his home in the so-called little magazines of the 1890s (as well as in the poster-art that they spawned). One of the earliest and most influential of these in America, ''The Chap-Book'' (1894–98), which featured a story about Pierrot by the aesthete Percival Pollard in its second number, was soon host to Beardsley-inspired Pierrots drawn by E.B. Bird and Frank Hazenplug. (The Canadian poet Bliss Carman should also be mentioned for his contribution to Pierrot's dissemination in mass-market publications like ''Harper's Magazine, Harper's''.) Like most things associated with the Decadence, such exotica discombobulated the mainstream American public, which regarded the little magazines in general as "freak periodicals" and declared, through one of its mouthpieces, ''Munsey's Magazine'', that "each new representative of the species is, if possible, more preposterous than the last." And yet the Pierrot of that species was gaining a foothold elsewhere. The composers Amy Beach and Arthur Foote devoted a section to Pierrot (as well as to Pierrette, his Decadent counterpart) in two ludic pieces for piano—Beach's ''Children's Carnival'' (1894) and Foote's ''Five Bagatelles'' (1893). The fin-de-siècle world in which this Pierrot resided was clearly at odds with the reigning American Realist and Naturalist aesthetic (though such figures as Ambrose Bierce and John LaFarge were mounting serious challenges to it). It is in fact jarring to find the champion of American prose Realism, William Dean Howells, introducing ''Pastels in Prose'' (1890), a volume of French Prose poetry, prose-poems containing a Paul Margueritte pantomime, ''The Death of Pierrot'', with words of warm praise (and even congratulations to each poet for failing "to saddle his reader with a moral"). So uncustomary was the French Aesthetic viewpoint that, when Pierrot made an appearance in ''Pierrot the Painter'' (1893), a pantomime by Alfred Thompson (librettist), Alfred Thompson, set to music by the American composer Laura Sedgwick Collins, ''The New York Times'' covered it as an event, even though it was only a student production. It was found to be "pleasing" because, in part, it was "odd". Not until the first decade of the next century, when the great (and popular) fantasist Maxfield Parrish worked his magic on the figure, would Pierrot be comfortably naturalized in America. Of course, writers from the United States living abroad—especially in Paris or London—were aberrantly susceptible to the charms of the Decadence. Such a figure was Stuart Merrill, who consorted with the French Symbolists and who compiled and translated the pieces in ''Pastels in Prose''. Another was William Theodore Peters, an acquaintance of Ernest Dowson and other members of the Rhymers' Club and a driving force behind the conception and theatrical realization of Dowson's ''Pierrot of the Minute'' (1897; see #England 2, England above). Of the three books that Peters published before his death (of starvation) at the age of forty-two, his ''Posies out of Rings: And Other Conceits'' (1896) is most notable here: in it, four poems and an "Epilogue" for the aforementioned Dowson play are devoted to Pierrot. (From the mouth of Pierrot ''loquitur'': "Although this pantomime of life is passing fine,/Who would be happy must not marry Columbine".) Another pocket of North-American sympathy with the Decadence—one manifestation of what the Latin world called ''modernismo''—could be found in the progressive literary scene of Mexico, its parent country, Spain, having been long conversant with the ''commedia dell'arte''. In 1897, :es:Bernardo Couto Castillo, Bernardo Couto Castillo, another Decadent who, at the age of twenty-two, died even more tragically young than Peters, embarked on a series of Pierrot-themed short stories—"Pierrot Enamored of Glory" (1897), "Pierrot and His Cats" (1898), "The Nuptials of Pierrot" (1899), "Pierrot's Gesture" (1899), "The Caprices of Pierrot" (1900)—culminating, after the turn of the century (and in the year of Couto's death), with "Pierrot-Gravedigger" (1901). For the Spanish-speaking world, according to scholar Emilio Peral Vega, Couto "expresses that first manifestation of Pierrot as an alter ego in a game of symbolic otherness ..."


Central and South America

Inspired by the French Symbolists, especially Verlaine, Rubén Darío, the Nicaraguan poet widely acknowledged as the founder of Spanish-American literary Modernism (''modernismo''), placed Pierrot ("sad poet and dreamer") in opposition to Columbine ("fatal woman", the arch-materialistic "lover of rich silk garments, golden jewelry, pearls and diamonds") in his 1898 prose-poem ''The Eternal Adventure of Pierrot and Columbine''.


Russia

In the last year of the century, Pierrot appeared in a Russian ballet, ''Les Millions d'Arlequin, Harlequin's Millions'' a.k.a. ''Harlequinade'' (1900), its libretto and choreography by Marius Petipa, its music by Riccardo Drigo, its dancers the members of St. Petersburg's Mariinsky Ballet, Imperial Ballet. It would set the stage for the later and greater triumphs of Pierrot in the productions of the Ballets Russes.


Nineteenth-century legacy

The Pierrot bequeathed to the twentieth century had acquired a rich and wide range of personae. He was the naïve butt of practical jokes and amorous scheming (Gautier); the prankish but innocent waif (Banville, Verlaine, Willette); the narcissistic dreamer clutching at the moon, which could symbolize many things, from spiritual perfection to death (Giraud, Laforgue, Willette, Dowson); the frail, Neurasthenia, neurasthenic, often doom-ridden soul (Richepin, Beardsley); the clumsy, though ardent, lover, who wins Columbine's heart, or murders her in frustration (Margueritte); the cynical and misogynistic dandy, sometimes dressed in black (Huysmans/Hennique, Laforgue); the Christ-like victim of the martyrdom that is Art (Giraud, Willette, Ensor); the androgynous and unholy creature of corruption (Richepin, Wedekind); the madcap master of chaos (the Hanlon-Lees); the purveyor of hearty and wholesome fun (the English pier Pierrots)—and various combinations of these. Like the earlier masks of ''commedia dell'arte'', Pierrot now knew no national boundaries. Thanks to the international gregariousness of Modernism, he would soon be found everywhere.


Pierrot and modernism

Pierrot played a seminal role in the emergence of Modernism in the arts. He was a key figure in every art-form except architecture. With respect to poetry, T. S. Eliot's "breakthrough work", "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" (1915), owed its existence to the poems of
Jules Laforgue Jules Laforgue (; 16 August 1860 – 20 August 1887) was a Franco-Uruguayan poet, often referred to as a Symbolist poet. Critics and commentators have also pointed to Impressionism as a direct influence and his poetry has been called "part-symbo ...
, whose ''"ton 'pierrot'"'' informed all of Eliot's early poetry. (Laforgue, he said, "was the first to teach me how to speak, to teach me the poetic possibilities of my own idiom of speech.") Prufrock is a Pierrot transplanted to America. Another prominent Modernist, Wallace Stevens, was undisguised in his identification with Pierrot in his earliest poems and letters—an identification that he later complicated and refined through such avatars as Bowl (in ''Bowl, Cat and Broomstick'' [1917]), Carlos (in ''Carlos Among the Candles'' [1917]), and, most importantly, Crispin (in "The Comedian as the Letter C" [1923]). As for fiction, William Faulkner began his career as a chronicler of Pierrot's amorous disappointments and existential anguish in such little-known works as his play ''The Marionettes'' (1920) and the verses of his ''Vision in Spring'' (1921), works that were an early and revealing declaration of the novelist's "fragmented state". (Some critics have argued that Pierrot stands behind the semi-autobiographical Nick Adams (character), Nick Adams of Faulkner's fellow-Nobel Prize in Literature, Nobel laureate Ernest Hemingway, and another contends that James Joyce's Stephen Dedalus, again an avatar of his own creator, also shares the same parentage.) In music, historians of Modernism generally place Arnold Schoenberg's 1912 song-cycle ''Pierrot lunaire'' at the very pinnacle of High-Modernist achievement. And in ballet, Igor Stravinsky's Petrushka (ballet), Petrushka (1911), in which the traditionally Pulcinella-like clown wears the heart of Pierrot, is often argued to have attained the same stature. Students of Modernist painting and sculpture are familiar with Pierrot (in many different attitudes, from the ineffably sad to the ebulliently impudent) through the masterworks of his acolytes, including
Pablo Picasso Pablo Ruiz Picasso (25 October 1881 – 8 April 1973) was a Spanish painter, sculptor, printmaker, ceramicist and Scenic design, theatre designer who spent most of his adult life in France. One of the most influential artists of the 20th ce ...
, Juan Gris, Georges Rouault, Salvador Dalí, Max Beckmann, August Macke, Paul Klee, Jacques Lipchitz—the list is very long (see #Visual arts, Visual arts below). As for the drama, Pierrot was a regular fixture in the plays of the Little Theatre Movement (Edna St. Vincent Millay's ''Aria da Capo'' [1920], Robert Emmons Rogers' ''Behind a Watteau Picture'' [1918], Blanche Jennings Thompson's ''The Dream Maker'' [1922]), which nourished the careers of such important Modernists as Eugene O'Neill, Susan Glaspell, and others. In film, a beloved early comic hero was the Little Tramp of Charlie Chaplin, who conceived the character, in Chaplin's words, as "a sort of Pierrot". As the diverse incarnations of the nineteenth-century Pierrot would predict, the hallmarks of the Modernist Pierrot are his ambiguity and complexity. One of his earliest appearances was in Alexander Blok's ''The Puppet Show'' (1906), called by one theater-historian "the greatest example of the harlequinade in Russia". Vsevolod Meyerhold, who both directed the first production and took on the role, dramatically emphasized the multifacetedness of the character: according to one spectator, Meyerhold's Pierrot was "nothing like those familiar, falsely sugary, whining Pierrots. Everything about him is sharply angular; in a hushed voice he whispers strange words of sadness; somehow he contrives to be caustic, heart-rending, gentle: all these things yet at the same time impudent."


''Pierrot lunaire''

The fifty poems that were published by Albert Giraud (born Emile Albert Kayenbergh) as ''Pierrot lunaire (book), Pierrot lunaire: Rondels bergamasques'' in 1884 were set to music several times. The best known version is by Arnold Schoenberg, i.e., his Opus 21: ''Dreimal sieben Gedichte aus Albert Girauds'' Pierrot lunaire (''Thrice-Seven Poems from Albert Giraud's'' Pierrot lunaire—Schoenberg was numerologically superstitious). This led, among other things, to ensemble groups' appropriating Pierrot's name, such as the English Pierrot Players (1967–70). The Pierrot behind those cycles has invaded worlds well beyond those of composers, singers, and ensemble-performers. Theatrical groups such as the Opera Quotannis have brought Pierrot's Passion (Christianity), Passion to the dramatic stage; dancers such as Glen Tetley have choreographed it; poets such as Wayne Koestenbaum have derived original inspiration from it. It has been translated into still more distant media by painters, such as Paul Klee; fiction-writers, such as Helen Stevenson; filmmakers, such as Bruce LaBruce; and graphic-novelists, such as Antoine Dodé. A passionately sinister Pierrot Lunaire has even shadowed DC Comics' Batman. Pierrot is aptly honored in the title of a song by the British rock-group Soft Machine, The Soft Machine: "Thank You Pierrot Lunaire" (1969).From the album ''Volume Two (The Soft Machine album), Volume Two''.


Carnivals

Pierrot appears among the revelers at various international carnivals. His name suggests kinship with the Pierrot Grenade of Trinidad and Tobago Carnival, but the latter seems to have no connection with the French clown.


Notes


References

* * * * * * * *Reinhold Brinkmann, Brinkmann, Reinhold (1997). "The fool as paradigm: Schoenberg's ''Pierrot Lunaire'' and the modern artist." In * * *Campardon, Emile (1877). ''Les spectacles de la Foire ...: documents inédits recueillis aux archives nationales''. 2 vols. Paris: Berger-Levrault et Cie. Vol
I
at Archive.org. Vol
II
at Gallica Books. *Campardon, Emile (1880). ''Les Comédiens du Roi de la Troupe Italienne pendant les deux derniers siècles: documents inédits recueillis aux archives nationales''. 2 vols. Paris: Berger-Levrault et Cie. Vols.
I
an
II
at Archive.org. *
Champfleury (Jules-François-Félix Husson, called Fleury, called) (1859). ''Souvenirs des Funambules''. Paris: Lévy Frères.
* * * * * * *Dick, Daniella (2013). "'Marked you that?': Stephen Dedalus, Pierrot". In * * * *
Fournier, Edouard (1885). ''Etudes sur la vie et les oeuvres de Molière ...''. Paris: Laplace, Sanchez et Cie.
*Gautier, Théophile (1858–1859). ''Histoire de l'art dramatique en France depuis vingt-cinq ans.'' 6 vols. Paris: Edition Hetzel. *Gherardi, Evaristo, ed. (1721). ''Le Théâtre Italien de Gherardi ou le Recueil général de toutes les comédies et scènes françoises jouées par les Comédiens Italiens du Roy ...'' 6 vols. Amsterdam: Michel Charles le Cene. Vols
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an
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at Google Books. * * *Gueullette, T.-S. (1938). ''Notes et souvenirs sur le Théâtre-Italien au XVIIIe siècle''. Pub. J.-E. Gueullette. Paris: E. Droz. *
Janin, Jules (1881). ''Deburau, histoire du Théâtre à Quatre Sous pour faire suite à l'histoire du Théâtre-Français''. 1832. Rpt. in 1 vol, Paris: Librairie des Bibliophiles.
* * * * *Lesage, Alain-René, and Dorneval (1724–1737). ''Le Théâtre de la Foire ou l'Opéra-Comique, contenant les meilleures pièces qui ont été représentées aux Foires de S. Germain & de S. Laurent.'' 10 vols. Paris: Pierre Gandouin. * * *Marsh, Roger (2007a). "'A multicoloured alphabet': rediscovering Albert Giraud's ''Pierrot Lunaire''". ''Twentieth-Century Music''. 4 (1: March): 97–121. *Marsh, Roger (2007b). "The translations." In booklet accompanying CDs: ''Roger Marsh—Albert Giraud's'' Pierrot lunaire, ''fifty rondels bergamasques''. With The Hilliard Ensemble, Red Byrd, Juice, Ebor Singers & Paul Gameson ''director'', Linda Hirst, Joe Marsh ''narrator''. NMC Recordings: Cat. No. NMC D127. * *
Merrill, Stuart, tr. (1890). ''Pastels in prose''. Introduction by William Dean Howells. New York: Harper & Brothers.
*
Millay, Edna St. Vincent (1921). ''Aria da Capo''. New York: Mitchell Kennerley.
*
Muddiman, Bernard (1921). ''The men of the nineties''. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons.
* * * *''Nouveau Théâtre Italien (Le) ou Recueil général des comédies représentées par les Comédiens Italiens ordinaries du Roi'' (1753). 10 vols. Paris: Briasson. *Nye, Edward (2014): "Jean-Gaspard Deburau: romantic Pierrot". ''New theatre quarterly'', 30:2 (May): 107-119. *Nye, Edward (2015-2016): "The romantic myth of Jean-Gaspard Deburau". ''Nineteenth-century French studies'', 44: 1 & 2 (Fall-Winter): 46-64. *Nye, Edward (2016): "The pantomime repertoire of the Théâtre des Funambules," ''Nineteenth century theatre and film'', 43: 1 (May): 3-20. * * *Pandolfi, Vito (1957–1969). ''La Commedia dell'Arte, storia e testo''. 6 vols. Florence: Sansoni Antiquariato.
Parfaict, François and Claude, and Godin d'Abguerbe (1767). ''Dictionnaire des théâtres de Paris ... '' Vol. 3. Paris: Rozet

Péricaud, Louis (1897). ''Le Théâtre des Funambules, ses mimes, ses acteurs et ses pantomimes ...'' Paris: Sapin.
* * *Piron, Alexis (1928–1931). ''Œuvres complètes illustrées''. Pub. Pierre Dufay. 10 vols. Paris: F. Guillot. * * * * * *Rolfe, Bari (1978). "Magic century of French mime". ''Mime, mask & marionette: a quarterly journal of performing arts''. 1 (3: fall): 135-58. * *Salerno, Henry F., tr. (1967). ''Scenarios of the Commedia dell'Arte: Flaminio Scala's'' Il teatro delle favole rappresentative. New York: New York University Press. *Maurice Sand, Sand, Maurice (Jean-François-Maurice-Arnauld, Baron Dudevant, called) (1915). ''The history of the harlequinade'' [orig. ''Masques et bouffons''. 2 vols. Paris: Michel Lévy Frères, 1860]. Philadelphia: Lippincott. * * * *Séverin (Séverin Cafferra, called) (1929). ''L'Homme Blanc: souvenirs d'un Pierrot''. Introduction et notes par Gustave Fréjaville. Paris: Plon. * * * * * *Švehla, Jaroslav (1977). "Jean Gaspard Deburau: the immortal Pierrot." Tr. Paul Wilson. ''Mime Journal'': 5. (This journal-length article is a translated condensation of Švehla's book-length study ''Deburau, nieśmiertelny Pierrot'' [Prague: Melantrich, 1976].)
Symons, Arthur (1919). ''The Symbolist Movement in literature''. Revised and enlarged edition. New York: E.P. Dutton & Company.
* * * *


Further reading

* * *
Goby, Emile, ed. (1889). ''Pantomimes de Gaspard et Ch. Deburau''. Paris: Dentu.Hugounet, Paul (1889). ''Mimes et Pierrots: notes et documents inédits pour servir à l'histoire de la pantomime''. Paris: Fischbacher.
* *Larcher, Félix and Eugène, eds. (1887). ''Pantomimes de Paul Legrand''. Paris: Librairie Théàtrale.
Lee, Siu Hei (2018). ''The music and social politics of Pierrot, 1884-1915.'' Unpub. Ph.D. diss., University of California, San Diego.Norman, Ana (2021). ''Miming modernity: representations of Pierrot in fin-de-siècle France.'' Unpub. Master's thesis, Southern Methodist University.
* (Analyzes Pierrots of Arnold Schoenberg and Paul Margueritte in light of late-19th-century notions of "hysteria.") *Sentenac, Paul. (1923). ''Pierrot et les artistes: mémoires de l'Ami Pierrot''. Paris: Sansot, Chiberre. *


External links


Driant, Pénélope (2012). ''Maurice Farina, mime, archiviste et collectionneur (1883-1943)''. Unpub. Master's thesis.Kreuiter, Allison Dorothy. (2007). ''Morphing moonlight: gender, masks and carnival mayhem. The figure of Pierrot in Giraud, Ensor, Dowson and Beardsley.'' Unpub. doc. diss., University of the Free State.Levillain, Adele Dowling (1945). ''The evolution of pantomime in France.'' Unpub. Master's thesis, Boston University.Toepfer, Karl (2019). ''Pantomime: the history and metamorphosis of a theatrical ideology''.
{{Authority control Zanni class characters Clever Zanni class characters Commedia dell'arte male characters Mime French clowns Fictional French people Fictional characters introduced in the 17th century