Théâtre Feydeau, a theatre completed in 1791 in Paris, France, and its company of performers
In 1791, the company set up home in a new theatre, the Théâtre Feydeau, previously reserved for the troupe of the opera buffa.
Upon the Royal Family's return to Paris on 24 June 1791, after its unsuccessful flight and arrest in Varennes, the Théâtre de Monsieur was officially renamed Théâtre Français & Italien de la rue Feydeau, but by July this had been shortened to Théâtre de la rue Feydeau, or simply the Théâtre Feydeau.
Broadway theatre | West End theatre | musical theatre | Royal National Theatre | theatre | Royal Court Theatre | American Ballet Theatre | Musical theatre | National Theatre | Theatre Royal, Drury Lane | Bolshoi Theatre | Abbey Theatre | Haymarket Theatre | Theatre Royal | Play (theatre) | Globe Theatre | Theatre | Mariinsky Theatre | Manhattan Theatre Club | Lyric Theatre | Théâtre du Châtelet | Her Majesty's Theatre | Grand Théâtre de Genève | Théâtre des Champs-Élysées | Theatre 625 | Goodman Theatre | Sydney Theatre Company | Lyceum Theatre, London | Gaiety Theatre, London | Almeida Theatre |
They include views of the Fountain of Regeneration, the Rue des Colonnes—an arcaded street of baseless Doric columns leading to the Théâtre Feydeau—the chamber of the Conseil des Anciens in the Tuileries and Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s grotto in its landscaped setting at Ermenonville, Oise.
A pasticcio with the same title, with some music by Bianchi as well as Paisiello, Guglielmi, Giacomo Gotifredo Ferrari, Sarti and Soler was performed at Théâtre Feydeau in Paris on 5 June 1789.
He was the son of a violinist who played at the Opéra of Paris, and about 1801 he became a flutist and oboist at the Théâtre Feydeau and Théâtre de l'Opéra Comique to 1821.