François Paul Meurice
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
François Paul Meurice (1818–1905) was a French dramatist.
He was born in Paris on 7 February 1818. In 1848 he became the editor of the Evenement, founded by Victor Hugo, and in 1869 he was one of the promoters of the Rappel, a journal on similar lines.
He was the literary executor of Victor Hugo, and edited his works (1880-1885). In collaboration with Auguste Vacquerie and Theophile Gautier, he produced Falstaff (1842), a play in imitation of Shakespeare, and in 1843 an imitation of the Antigone; and with Alexandre Dumas, père as Hamlet (1847). He also wrote Benvenuto Cellini (1852), Schamyl (1854), Struensee (1893), and dramatic versions of Les Misérables (1878), Notre Dame de Paris (1876), Quatre-vingt-treize (1881). He died on 12 December 1905.
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.