Joseph Servières (20 July 1781 – 3 February 1826[1]) was an early 19th-century French playwright.
Biography
Servieres made good studies in his hometown and came very young to Paris, where upon his arrival he gave several
theatre plays which had some success. He was noticed by
Lucien Bonaparte, then interior minister, but soon fell into Napoleon's disfavor. In 1807, he married
Eugénie Charen, the stepdaughter of the painter
Lethière, who was herself a distinguished artist. He then accompanied to Italy his stepfather who had been appointed director of the French School in Rome, where he met Lucien, a longtime friend and confidant of Lethière.
Servières returned to Paris in 1812 and obtained a position in the public treasury. Under the
Restoration,
he was appointed a public auditor at the
Court of Audit on 8 September 1818. He kept on writing plays until his death.
1801: La Martingale, ou le Serret de gagner au jeu, arlequinade-vaudeville in 1 act, in prose, Paris, in-8°, with Francis and Belargey
1801: Le Père malgré lui, comédie-vaudeville in 1 act and in prose, with R. Philidor [Rochelle]
1801: Le Télégraphe d’amour, comedy in 1 act, in prose, mingled with vaudevilles, with Charles Henrion
1801: Rembrandt, ou la Vente après décès, one-act vaudeville anecdotique, with Étienne, Morel and Moras
1802:Fontenelle, one-act comédie-anecdote, in prose and vaudevilles, with Petit ainé
1803: Monsieur Botte, ou le Négociant anglais, comedy in 3 acts and in prose, imitated from the novel by
Pigault-Lebrun, with Ernest de Clonard and François Grille
1803: Manon la ravaudeuse, one-act vaudeville, mingled with vaudevilles, with
Désaugiers and Charles Henrion
1803: Fanchon la vielleuse de retour dans ses montagnes, three-act comedy, mingled with vaudevilles, with
Joseph Aude
1804: Les Charbonniers de la Forêt noire, three-act comedy, mingled with vaudevilles, with
Sewrin and Lafortelle
1803: Drelindindin, ou le carillonneur de la Samaritaine, one-act parade, mingled with vaudevilles ; premiered at Théâtre de la Cité-Variétés, 23 brumaire an 11, with Charles Henrion
1803: Jean Bart, one-act historical comedy, in prose and vaudevilles, with Duval and Ligier ;
1804: Un quart d’heure d’un sage, one-act vaudeville, with F.-P.-A. Léger ;
1804: Jocrisse suicidé, tragicomic drama in 1 act and in prose, with Sidoni ;
1804: Brisquet et Jolicœur, one-act vaudeville, with
Dumaniant ;
1804: Bombarde, ou les Marchands de chansons, parody of Ossian, ou les Bardes, mélodrame lyrique in 5 acts, with Daudet and Léger ;
1804: La Belle Milanaise, ou la Fille femme, page et soldat, three-act
melodrama,
extravaganza, with Charles Henrion ;
1804: Le Dansomane de la rue Quincampoix, ou le Bal interrompu, one-act folie-vaudeville, with
Moreau ;
1805: Jeanneton colère, one-act vaudeville grivois, with G. Duval ;
1805: Les Nouvelles Métamorphoses, one-act vaudeville, with Antoine-Marie Coupart ;
1806: Alphonsine, ou la Tendresse maternelle, melodrama in 3 acts and in prose, from the novel by
Félicité de Genlis, with
Dumersan ;
1806: Madame Scarron, one-act comédie-vaudeville, with Désaugiers
1807: Monsieur Giraffe, ou la Mort de l’ours blanc, one-act vaudeville, par M. Bernard, de la rue aux Ours, with Dumersan, Desaugiers and five other collaborators ;
1807: Arlequin double, one-act vaudeville, with Desaugiers ;
1809: La pièce qui n’en est pas une, dialogue analogue aux prologues et épilogues, with
Georges Duval and Bonnel ;
1804: Toujours le même, one-act vaudeville, Paris, Théâtre Montansier, 12 fructidor an XII, with Antoine-Marie Coupart ;
1826: Chansons nouvelles, Paris, chez les Principaux Libraires, in-8°.
Two other plays are attributed to Servières: l’Amant comédien and Les trois n’en font qu’un, as well as an essay entitled Revue des théâtres. Several songs from his comedies have been inserted in the Chansonnier français and other lyrical collections.