Online Encyclopedia

LEKAIN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 405 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LEKAIN  , the

stage name of
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Henri Louis
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Cain (1728-1778), French actor, who was born in Paris on the 14th of
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April 1728, the son of a silversmith . He was educated at the College Mazarin, and joined an amateur
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company of players against which the Comedic Francaise obtained an injunction . Voltaire supported him for a time and enabled him to act in his private theatre and also before the duchess of Maine . Owing to the hostility of the actors it was only after a struggle of seventeen months that. by the command of Louis XV., he was received at the Comedic Francaise . His success was immediate . Among his best parts were Herod in Mariamne,
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Nero in
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Britannicus and similar tragic roles, in spite of the fact that he was short and stout, with irregular and rather
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common features . His name is connected with a number of important scenic reforms . It was he who had the benches removed on which privileged spectators formerly sat encumbering the stage, Count Lauragais paying for him an excessive indemnity demanded . Lekain also protested against the method of sing-
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song declamation prevalent, and endeavoured to correct the costuming of the plays, although unable to obtain the historic accuracy at which Talma aimed . He died in Paris on the 8th of
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February 1778 . If 's eldest son published his Memoirec (18o1) with his corresponden'e ucith Voltaire, Garrick and others . They were reprinted with a preface In "I'
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ala,a in Memoires sur l'
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art dramatique (1825) .

End of Article: LEKAIN
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BARON LOUIS FRANCOIS LEJEUNE (1776-1848)
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LELAND (LEYLAND Or LAYLONDE), JOHN (c. 1506-1552)

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