Rosemonde Gérard
Louise-Rose-Étiennette Gérard, known as Rosemonde Gérard (April 5, 1871, Paris – July 8, 1953, Paris) was a French poet and playwright. She was the wife of Edmond Rostand (1868–1918, author of Cyrano de Bergerac), and was a granddaughter of Étienne Maurice Gérard, who was a Marshal and a Prime Minister of France.[1]
Gérard is perhaps best known today as the author of the lines:
Car, vois-tu, chaque jour je t’aime davantage,
Aujourd’hui plus qu’hier et bien moins que demain.(For, you see, each day I love you more,
Today more than yesterday and less than tomorrow.)[2]
Among Gérard's other works is the play “A Good Little Devil” (1913), co-written with Maurice Rostand.[6] It was made into a movie of the same name in 1914. Mary Pickford starred in both the play and the movie; she later opined that the movie was one of the worst—if not the worst—she had ever made.[7]
Gérard and Rostand were married on April 8, 1890;[8] they had two sons, Maurice (1891–1968) and Jean Rostand (1894–1977). In later years, Gérard and Maurice Rostand frequented an intellectual circle that included Jean-Paul Sartre and Gilbert Martineau.
It has been said that Gérard "doubtless would have been famous had not her husband's star so far eclipsed her own."[9] After 35 years of widowhood, she died in 1953 and is buried at Cimetiere de Passy, in Paris, as is her son Maurice.[10]
Works
- Les Pipeaux (The Reed Pipes), poems, 1889/90
- Les Vieux, interpreted by Sarah Bernhard in 1903
- Un bon petit Diable (A Good Little Devil), with Maurice Rostand, 1912
- La Marchande d'allumettes (The Candle Seller), with Maurice Rostand (lyrics) and Tiarko Richepin (music), comic opera, 1914
- La Robe d'un soir, 1925
- La Vie amoureuse de Madame de Genlis, 1926
- L'Arc-en-ciel (The Rainbow), poems, 1926
- Mes souvenirs: Cyrano de Bergerac, with a design from Edmond Rostand, 1927
- Le Féminisme (Feminism), with her son Maurice Rostand, conference, 1930
- La Forêt enchantée (The Enchanted Forest), with Maurice Rostand, theater piece, 1931
- Les Papillotes (wrapped candies), one-act in verse, 1931
- Féeries (Fairies), 1933
- Les Masques de l'amour, theater in verse, 1928
- La Tour Saint-Jacques (St. James Tower), theater in verse, 1928
- Les Papillotes, theater in verse, 1928
- À quoi rêvent les vieilles filles (What Do Old Girls Dream Of), theater in verse, 1928
- La Tour Saint-Jacques, one-act in verse, 1934
- Edmond Rostand, 1935
- Rien que des chansons (Nothing But Songs), 1939
- Les Muses françaises (The French Muses), poems, 1943
- Méditations poétiques et harmonies poétiques de Victor Hugo, sonnet, preface by Rosemonde Gérard, 1930
- Histoire d'amour et Lettre de rupture, two songs by Rosemonde Gérard and Tiarko Richepin, registered by Jeanne Aubert in 1942
References
- ↑ French Wikipedia: Rosemond Gérard; Edmond Rostand.
- ↑ Rosemonde Gérard, “L’éternelle chanson,” IX, Les Pipeaux. 1890. —P. Dupré, Encyclopédie des Citations, p. 176 (1959); Respectfully Quoted: A Dictionary of Quotations. 1989. The entire poem appears here.
- ↑ See, for example, Iloveyou365.
- ↑ L’Internaute: Aujourd’hui plus qu’hier et bien moins que demain.
- ↑ Adin antique jewelry: Plus qu'hier et moins que demain.
- ↑ IBDB: Rosemonde Gerard.
- ↑ IMDB: A Good Little Devil.
- ↑ Edmond Rostand.
- ↑ Theatrehistory.com: Edmond Rostand.
- ↑ Find A Grave: Rosemonde Gerard.