Aristide Hignard
Jean-Louis Aristide Hignard was a French composer of light opera notable as a friend of Jules Verne, also from Nantes and six years Hignard's junior, some of whose librettos and verse he set to music.
Life and music
The son of a shipowner, Hignard was born in Nantes and studied at the Paris Conservatory with Fromental Halévy and won the Second Grand Prix de Rome in 1850 with the cantata Emma et Eginhard. His first comic opera Le Visionnaire was published in 1851.During the 1850s Hignard composed four comic operas, for which his childhood friend Jules Verne provided the librettos. In 1861, the operetta Les Musiciens de l'orchestre was performed, which Hignard had composed together with Léo Delibes and Jules Erlanger.
For a long time, Hignard worked on his main work, the five-act opera Hamlet based on a libretto by Pierre de Garal. It was premiered in 1868 with great success. He also composed a series of songs as well as waltzes and melodies for the piano.
He died in Vernon.
Works
La Mille et deuxième nuit, opera with libretto by Jules Verne, never performedLe Visionnaire, opéra-comique in 1 act- Le Colin-maillard, opéra-comique in 1 act Les Compagnons de la Marjolaine opéra-comique in 1 act Monsieur de Chimpanzé, operetta L'Auberge des Ardennes, opéra-comique in 1 act Le Nouveau Pourceaugnac, played at the Bouffes-Parisiens Les Musiciens de l'orchestre, a collaboration with Léo Delibes Hamlet, opéra Rimes et mélodies, on poems by Jules Verne