Online Encyclopedia

FIGARO

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 334 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FIGARO  , a famous dramatic

character first introduced on the stage by Beaumarchais in the Barbier de Seville, the Mariage de Figaro, and the Folle Journee . The name is said to be an old
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Spanish and
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Italian word for a wigmaker, connected with the verb cigarrar, to roll in paper . Many of the traits of the character are to be found in earlier comic types of the
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Roman and Italian stage, but as a whole the conception was marked by
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great originality; and Figaro soon .seized the popular
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imagination, and became the recognized representative of daring,
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clever and nonchalant roguery and intrigue . Almost immediately after its appearance, Mozart chose the
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Marriage of Figaro as the subject of an opera, and the Barber of Seville was treated first by Paisiello, and afterwards in 1816 by Rossini . In 1826 the name of the witty
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rogue was taken by a journal which continued till 1833 to be one of the
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principal Parisian
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periodicals, numbering among its contributors such men as Jules Janin, Paul Lacroix, Leon Gozlan, Alphonse Karr, Dr Veron, Jules Sandeau and George Sand . Various abortive attempts were made to restore the Figaro during the next twenty years; and in 1854 the efforts of M. de Villemessant were crowned with success (see
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NEWSPAPERS: France) . See Marc Monnier,
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Les Aieux de Figaro (1868) ; H. de Villemessant, Memoires d'un journaliste (1867) .

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