Adrien-Thomas Perdou de Subligny
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Adrien-Thomas Perdou de Subligny (1636–1696) was a 17th-century French actor, writer and playwright. A lawyer at the Parlement of Paris, he composed several comedies including La Folle Querelle ou la Critique d'Andromaque (1668) and Le Désespoir extravagant (1670), a play Racine attributed to Molière, after which they definitively ended up their relations. He also wrote:
- La Muse dauphine (1667-1668),
- La Fausse Clélie ou histoire françoise galante et comique, a satire of Mademoiselle de Scudéry's novels (1671) whose composition prefigured some of the novelistic process Robert Challe resorted to in his Les Illustres Françaises published in 1713.
His daughter Marie-Thérèse was one of the great dancers of the Académie royale de musique at the turn of the 17th-18th centuries.
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- 17th-century French lawyers
- 17th-century French male actors
- French male stage actors
- 17th-century French dramatists and playwrights
- 17th-century French male writers
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- 1636 births
- 1696 deaths
- 17th-century French translators