Gabriel Astruc
Gabriel Astruc | |
---|---|
Born | 14 March 1864 Bordeaux, France |
Died | 7 July 1938 Paris, France | (aged 74)
Occupation(s) | Journalist, agent, promoter, theatre manager, theatrical impresario, playwright |
Gabriel Astruc (14 March 1864 – 7 July 1938) was a French journalist, agent, promoter, theatre manager, theatrical impresario, and playwright whose career connects many of the best-known incidents and personalities of
Biography
Born in Bordeaux, to the Astruc family, he was the son of Élie Aristide Astruc (1831–1905), the Grand Rabbi of Belgium from 1866 to 1879, and began his career working for publisher Paul Ollendorff, and as a columnist from 1885 through 1895. As a regular at Montmartre's prototypically bohemian Le Chat Noir cabaret, he befriended a young Erik Satie and wrote articles and theater pieces under the pen name Surtac.[2] In 1897 he founded a music publishing company with his father-in-law Wilhelm Enoch, by 1900 he had introduced the luxury magazine Musica, and by 1904 had become a concert promoter.
In this period he was the booking agent for
From 1905 through 1912 Astruc brought a long list of musical giants to Paris under the banner "Great Season of Paris", including an Italian season with
In 1913 Astruc tried to parlay his success by commissioning Auguste Perret to build the innovative Théâtre des Champs-Élysées in the Avenue Montaige. This building is an architectural landmark of early reinforced concrete. After a brilliant and scandalous first season, climaxed by the famous riot at the May 29 premiere of The Rite of Spring, Astruc found himself financially ruined within six months. He was also the target of anti-Semitic attacks from Léon Daudet and others of the Action Française.[4]
After World War I, he worked in the field of radio and advertising, and in 1929 served as the manager of the
His papers reside at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts Dance Collection.
Sources
External links
- Léonore Database French language accessed 2024-01-26
- Personal papers of Gabriel Astruc are conserved at the French National Archives, online reading room, reference code 409AP : Fund inventory. accessed 2024-01-26
- Gabriel Astruc in Dezède: Archives and Chronology of Shows French language accessed 2024-01-26
- Gabriel Astruc at L'Art Lyrique Francaise French language accessed 2024-01-26
References
- ^ National Gallery of Australia, MS 154 Pat Gilmour’s interviews with artists/printers, Series 2 Clot letters, letters 537A, 537B. National Gallery of Australia Research Library and Archives.
- ^ Satie the bohemian: from cabaret to concert hall By Steven Moore Whiting
- ^ Sisters of Salome By Toni Bentley page 104
- ^ Rubinstein: a life By Harvey Sachs, Donald Manildi, page 72
- ^ Marcel Proust: A Life By William C. Carter, pg. 559