Charles-Antoine Leclerc de La Bruère

Charles-Antoine Leclerc de La Bruère (1716 in Crépy-en-Valois – 18 September 1754 in Rome) was an 18th-century French historian and diplomat.

He is mostly known as the librettist of the tragédie lyrique Dardanus by Jean-Philippe Rameau. The booklet was generally considered one of the worst that has been set to music by the composer. La Bruère amalgamated second rank mythological elements and epic reminiscences of the Italian Renaissance in an action of consummate improbability: the plot had to be amended several times to counter criticism.

From November 1744 to June 1748, La Bruère along Louis Fuzelier (another librettist working for Rameau), was director of the Mercure de France by royal patent.

In 1749, he went to Rome as secretary of embassy to the Duke of Nivernais.

Works

Bibliography

  • Cardinal Georges Grente (dir.), Dictionnaire des lettres françaises. Le XVIIIe, new edition reworked and updated under the direction of François Moureau, Paris, Fayard, 1995

References

  1. In 1784, this libretto was reduced and arranged by Nicolas-François Guillard and put to music by Antonio Sacchini.
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