Marie Lenéru
Marie Lenéru (June 2, 1875 – September 23, 1918) was a French playwright and diarist.
Marie Lenéru | |
---|---|
Born | June 2, 1875 |
Died | September 23, 1918 43) Lorient, France | (aged
Resting place | Cimetière Saint-Martin de Brest |
Nationality | French |
Other names | Antoine Morsain (pseudonym) |
Occupation(s) | playwright, diarist |
Signature | |
Lenéru became deaf and partially blind after contracting measles as a child. She was able to continue her education with the help of her mother, and in the 1910s and 1920s she wrote several plays that were performed in Paris, notably Les Affranchis.
Biography
Marie Lenéru was born in 1875 in Brest, France. Her family lived on rue de Siam. Her father Alfred Lenéru (1843–1876) was a naval lieutenant, a knight of the Legion of Honour, and a 1863 graduate of the École navale. He died when Marie was only 10 months old. The son of Parisian hoteliers, Alfred had married Marie Dauriac, the daughter of Rear Adm. Alexandre Dauriac and Augustine Hollard, in Brest in 1872. Other naval officers in Marie Lenéru's family included her great-grandfather Capt. Alexandre Dauriac and her uncles Commissioner General of the Navy Charles Dauriac and Capt. François Dauriac. She had one brother, Lionel Dauriac (1847–1923), who attended the École normale supérieure and became a philosophy professor and knight in the Legion of Honour.[1]
In May 1887, after having measles, Marie Lenéru became deaf and blind. She was 11 years old. Her mother worked to continue her education, using only her sense of touch.[2]
She eventually regained some of her eyesight, enabling her to write and read under a magnifying glass, but her deafness persisted. She died in 1918 in Lorient, during the Spanish flu pandemic.
Lenéru is perhaps best known as the subject of research by Suzanne Lavaud, the first deaf person to obtain a doctor of letters degree in France.[3]
Work
In 1908, Lenéru submitted a short story, titled La Vivante, to a literary competition organized by the newspaper Le Journal. Her victory in that competition marked her first success as a writer, drawing the attention of members of the French literary scene of the period including Catulle Mendès, Fernand Gregh, and Rachilde.[2]
Playwright
She wrote her first play, Les Affranchis, in 1908, and sent it to Mendès, who became a significant supporter of her work until his death in 1909. The play won a 1,000 franc prize as an unpublished work, then was published by Hachette in 1910, but it went three years without being performed. Gregh wrote a preface for the 1910 printing, noting that Mendès would have done so had he not died the year prior.[4][5] Eventually the theater director André Antoine decided to stage the play at the Odéon for the 1910–1911 season.
In 1914, the Académie Française awarded her the Prix Émile Augier for Less Affranchis. She was the first woman to receive the award.
After Lenéru's death, the play was republished by Georges Crès in 1926 and performed at the Comédie-Française in 1927.
With the success of Les Affranchis, several other plays written by Lenéru were staged in Paris: Le Redoutable in 1912, at the Odéon; La Triomphatrice in 1917, at the Comédie-Française; and La Paix in 1920, also at the Odéon. She also left several pieces that were not produced: La Maison sur le roc, Le Bonheur des autres, Les Lutteurs, Le Mahdi. These works were criticized by some as cold and intellectual, often focusing on couples in conflict over religion, family, or charity.[6]
Historian and diarist
In addition to her theatrical output, Lenéru also compiled research on significant historical figures, including a study of Louis Antoine de Saint-Just, a chapter of which was published in the Mercure de France under the pseudonym "Antoine Morsain."[7][8] She also wrote Le Cas de Miss Helen Keller, a look into the life and work of her deaf-blind contemporary Helen Keller.[9]
On her death, Lenéru left behind a diary, kept from 1893 until just before her death in 1918. In it, she stoically confides her sufferings and expresses an appetite for beauty and inner perfection that torments her. She describes her gradual loss of religious faith, which she replaced with a sort of pagan serenity and passion for life, as she finds fulfillment in writing.
The diary was published by Georges Crès in 1922, in two volumes with a preface by François de Curel. It was rereleased in 1945 by Grasset with a preface by Fernande Dauriac, and again in 2007 by Bartillat, with the first years of the diary removed.[10]
References
- Dossiers of the Légion d'honneur sur la base Léonore: cotes LH/669/6 (Alexandre II), LH/669/5 (Alexandre I), LH/669/16 (Charles) et LH/669/15 (Lionel).
- La Petite Illustration n° 358, théâtre n° 194. 1927-11-19.
- Lavaud, Suzanne (1932). Marie Lenéru, sa vie, son journal, son théâtre. Paris: Edgar Malfère.
- Lenéru, Marie (1910). Les Affranchis (Pièce en trois actes). Paris: Librairie Hachette et Cie.
- "Les Lettres". L'Intransigeant (in French). 1931-05-12. Retrieved 2021-01-21.
- Le Guennec, François; Zmelty, Nicolas-Henri (2013). La Belle Époque des femmes?: 1889-1914. Paris: Editions L'Harmattan. pp. 189–201. ISBN 978-2-343-00330-6. OCLC 853277012.
- Morsain, Antoine (1905-10-15). "Un professeur d'énergie, Saint-Just". Mercure de France (in French). pp. 488–501. Retrieved 2021-01-21.
- Cosnier, Colette (2001). Le silence des filles (in French). Fayard. pp. 488–501. ISBN 2213650004.
- "Lenéru, Marie - Le Cas De Miss Helen Keller". Litterature audio. 2009-01-16. Archived from the original on 2009-07-26.
- Lenéru, Marie, 1875-1918. (2007). Journal, 1893-1918 : "Je me sens devenir inexorable". Broche, François. Paris: Bartillat. ISBN 978-2-84100-359-4. OCLC 152504617.
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External links
- Marie Lenéru on Wikisource (in French)