Pierre Wolff by Paul Boyer c. 1905

Pierre Wolff (1 January 1865, in Paris – 1944) was a French playwright.[1]

Biography

Nazimova and Frank Gillmore in the Broadway production of The Marionettes (1911)

Pierre Wolff was a Jewish writer, who wrote numerous plays, as well as some libretti for operettas. He was the nephew of journalist Albert Wolff. His dramas were characterized by bitingly ironic observation of contemporary life, and by witty dialogue.[1] One of his earliest plays, Jacques Bouchard (1890) which was performed at Théâtre Libre, was such a flop that even his famous uncle lambasted it, but his subsequent plays were received with enthusiasm.[2] He had great success with the adultery-themed comedy The Secret of Polichinelle,[3] which played in over 80 cities including in the United States, and also with Le Ruisseau.[4] Nazimova performed in Les Marionnettes when it was produced in the United States.[5]

Works

Plays

Librettist

Filmography

Screenwriter

References

  1. ^ a b Frank Moore Colby; Talcott Williams, editors (1918) "Wolff, Pierre", The New International Encyclopædia, Vol. 23, p. 671, Dodd, Mead and Co., New York
  2. ^ "Small Talk of the Boulevards" (April 12, 1905) The Sketch, Vol. 49, No. 637, p. 442, London
  3. ^ Alfred Jarry (1903) "Les Theatres", Revue Blanche, Vol. 30, p. 155 (in French)
  4. ^ a b Le Ruisseau (1907)
  5. ^ Barrett H. Clarke, translator (1914) "Antoine and the 'Free Theatre'", Four Plays of the Free Theater, Stewart & Kidd Co., Cincinnati
  6. ^ Jacques Bouchard (1890) Tresse & Stock, Paris
  7. ^ Leurs filles (1891)
  8. ^ Les Maris de leurs filles (1892)
  9. ^ Amants et maîtresses (1896)
  10. ^ Celles qu'on respecte (1903)
  11. ^ L'Âge d'aimer (22 April 1905) Illustration Théatrale, No. 10, Paris
  12. ^ Les Marionnettes (1910)
  13. ^ Les Ailes brisées (1920)
  14. ^ Le Chemin de Damas (1922)