Hippolyte-Julien-Joseph Lucas
Hippolyte-Julien-Joseph Lucas was a French writer and critic whose literary output was largely centered on theatre and opera.
He was the author of several plays and opera libretti. In addition to his original stage works, Lucas also translated plays and libretti by other authors for performances in French. These included plays by Aristophanes, Euripides, Lope de Vega, and Calderón as well as Donizetti's operas Belisario, Maria Padilla, and Linda di Chamounix. He was the editor of Le Siècle, but his literary and theatrical criticism appeared in many other French journals as well, most notably L'Artiste, La Minerve, and Le Charivari. He was also a bookseller and later served as the librarian of the Bibliothèque de l'Arsenal. French composer Jeanne Rivet used Lucas’ text for her song “La plus jolie Maison de France.”
Principal works
Opera librettiL'étoile de Seville, grand opéra in four acts, composed by Michael Balfe, 1845La bouquetière, opera in one act, composed by Adolphe Adam, 1847Le siège de Leyde, opera in four acts composed by Charles-Louis-Adolphe Vogel, 1847La Saint-André ou L'orpheline bretonne, opera in one act composed by Giovanni Luigi Bazzoni, 1849 Lalla-Roukh, opéra comique in two acts, composed by Félicien David, 1862- Fior d'Aliza, opéra comique in four acts, composed by Victor Massé, 1866
- Les parias, opera in 3 acts, composed by Edmond Membrée, 1874
- Caractères et portraits de femmes, Brussels: Meline, 1836Histoire philosophique et littéraire du théatre français: depuis son origine jusqu'à nos jours, Paris: Gosselin, 1843Curiosités dramatiques et littéraires, Paris: Garnier frères, 1855
- Heures d'amour, Paris: Chez Jules Gay, 1864.Chants de divers pays (previously unpublished poems published posthumously by his son, Léo Lucas, and Olivier de Gourcuff. Nantes: Société des bibliophiles bretons et de l'histoire de Bretagne, 1893