Louis-Désiré Véron

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Louis Desiré Veron (1798 - September 27, 1867 in Paris) was a French opera manager and publisher.

Veron originally made his fortune from patent medicines. In 1829 he founded the literary magazine Revue de Paris, and from 1838 to 1852 was owner and director of the Constitutionnel, in which he published Eugene Sue's novel based on the legend of the Wandering Jew. It was also during Veron's direction and at his suggestion that Sainte-Beuve contributed the Causeries du lundi, an early example of the regular newspaper column.

He is largely known to history for his direction, from 1831-1835, of the Paris Opera. The new government, after the July Revolution of 1830, wished to offload the costs and responsibilities of the Opera, which had been effectively state-controlled since its inception. Veron saw the great potential of adapting the Opera to the bourgeois tastes of new audiences and applied for the franchise, which brought with it limited State subsidy. By bringing together the talents of designers (such as Duponchel), composers (such as Meyerbeer, Auber and Fromental Halévy), and librettists (such as Eugene Scribe and Casimir Delavigne), and developing great singers such as Alphonse Nourrit and Cornelie Falcon, he created the genre of 'Grand Opera'. The first new production under Veron's management, Meyerbeer's Robert le diable (21st November, 1831) began a new era in opera. When the government decided to further reduce subsidy of the Opera in 1835, Veron prudently withdrew, having made a substantial profit.

In 1852 Veron was elected to the Corps Législatif (the predecessor of the Chamber of Deputies). His Memoires d'un bourgeois de Paris (1853-1855) give a lively picture of his life and times.

Veron was eccentric in his appearance and behaviour. A contemporary, Philarete Chasles, describes him as follows:

Ruddy, with a pock-marked face, barely any nose, scrofulous, his neck enfolded in cloth that protected and hid his affliction, pot-bellied; [...] mouth smiling, lips thick, hair rare, eyebrows absent, dressed like a little lackey aping his master and with the affectations and the mincing airs of the salon. (quoted in Kelly, 2004 - see below).

[edit] Sources

  • W. L. Crosten, 'French Grand Opera: an Art and a Business', New York, 1948
  • T. F. Kelly, 'First Nights at the Opera', New Haven, 2004 ISBN 0300100442

[edit] Bibliography

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