Cocteau, Jean
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Cocteau, Jean
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Cocteau, Jean
Cocteau, Jean, 1889-1963
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Cocteau, Jean, 1889-1963
Cocteau, Jean, 1899-1963.
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Cocteau, Jean, 1899-1963.
Cocteau, Jean (Jean Maurice Clément Eugène), 1889-1963
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Cocteau, Jean (Jean Maurice Clément Eugène), 1889-1963
Cocteau, Jean (French writer, filmmaker, and draftsman, 1889-1963)
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Cocteau, Jean (French writer, filmmaker, and draftsman, 1889-1963)
كوكتو، جان، 1889-1963
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كوكتو، جان، 1889-1963
Cocteau
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Cocteau
קוקטו, ז'ן, 1892-1963
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קוקטו, ז'ן, 1892-1963
Cocteau, Jean, 1889-
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Cocteau, Jean, 1889-
Cocteau, Jean, active 1908-1960, author and artist
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Cocteau, Jean, active 1908-1960, author and artist
Cocteau, Jean, newspaper and magazine clippings
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Cocteau, Jean, newspaper and magazine clippings
Cocteau, Jean.
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Cocteau, Jean.
Kokutō, Jan 1889-1963
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Kokutō, Jan 1889-1963
جان كوكتو، 1889-1963
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جان كوكتو، 1889-1963
Jean Cocteau
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Jean Cocteau
Cocteau, Clément Eugène Jean Maurice, 1889-1963
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Cocteau, Clément Eugène Jean Maurice, 1889-1963
コクトー, ジャン
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コクトー, ジャン
Kokto, Zhan
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Kokto, Zhan
Kokutō, ... 1889-1963
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Kokutō, ... 1889-1963
コクト
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コクト
Jim
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Jim
Cocteau, Jean Maurice Eugène Clément
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Cocteau, Jean Maurice Eugène Clément
Кокто, Жан, 1889-1963
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Кокто, Жан, 1889-1963
קוקטו, ז׳אן, 1889-1963
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קוקטו, ז׳אן, 1889-1963
Koktō, Zan, 1889-1963
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Koktō, Zan, 1889-1963
コクトージャン, 1889-1963
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コクトージャン, 1889-1963
Kokto, Žan 1889-1963
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Kokto, Žan 1889-1963
Kokutō, Jan, 1889-1963
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Kokutō, Jan, 1889-1963
Cocteau, Jean M. 1889-1963
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Cocteau, Jean M. 1889-1963
קוקטו, ז׳אן
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קוקטו, ז׳אן
Cocteau, ... 1889-1963
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Cocteau, ... 1889-1963
Cocteau, Jean Maurice Eugéne Clément
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Cocteau, Jean Maurice Eugéne Clément
Cocteau, Clément Eugène Jean Maurice
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Cocteau, Clément Eugène Jean Maurice
Cocteau, Jean Maurice Eugène Clément 1889-1963
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Cocteau, Jean Maurice Eugène Clément 1889-1963
Kokto, Zhan 1889-1963
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Kokto, Zhan 1889-1963
Cocteau-Maritain, ... 1889-1963
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Cocteau-Maritain, ... 1889-1963
コクトオ
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コクトオ
Kokto, Ž.
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Kokto, Ž.
Cocteau, J. 1889-1963
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Cocteau, J. 1889-1963
Koktō, Zan 1889-1963
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Koktō, Zan 1889-1963
Cocteau, Clément Eugène Jean Maurice 1889-1963
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Cocteau, Clément Eugène Jean Maurice 1889-1963
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Biographical History
French poet, novelist, dramatist, designer, boxing manager, playwright and filmmaker. Antonin Artaud -- French poet, essayist, actor and director -- was the leading playwright of the 'Theatre of Cruelty.'
French poet, novelist, playwright, and artist.
Jean Cocteau (1889-1963) was a French poet, novelist, playwright, artist and filmmaker.
French poet, novelist, artist, playwright, and filmmaker.
Jean Cocteau, poet, playwright, and film director, born in Maisons-Lafitte, France. He had early success with his poems, which he fully exploited, and figured as the sponsor of Picasso, Stravinsky, Giorgio de Chirico, and the musical group known as Les Six. He was an actor, director, scenario writer, novelist, critic, and artist, all of his work being marked by vivacity and a pyrotechnic brilliance. His best-known works include his novel Les Enfants terribles (1929, Children of the Game), his play Orphée (1926, Orpheus), and his films Le Sang du poète (1932, The Blood of the Poet) and La Belle et la bête (1945, Beauty and the Beast).
French author.
Cocteau was a French visual artist, writer, and film maker; his film Blood of a Poet (Le sang d'un poète) had its premiere in Paris in 1932.
Jean Cocteau, one of the most versatile creative artists of the twentieth century, achieved celebrity as poet, playwright, journalist, novelist, artist, and filmmaker. At the time of his death he was perhaps the best-known French literary figure outside of France.
Born Jean Maurice Eugène Clément Cocteau on July 5, 1889, he was a child of affluence, particularly through the Lecomtes on the maternal side of his family. He began writing poetry as a boy and gained entrance into the literary world through his mother's social contacts. At age eighteen his work was the subject of a public reading that brought him his first notoriety, leading to the publication of his first book of poems, La lampe d'Aladin (1909).
In the next few years he met and was influenced by members of the avant-garde, resulting in less traditional works such as the ballet Parade (1917) in collaboration with Erik Satie, Léonide Massine, Sergei Diaghilev, and Pablo Picasso, Le Potomak (1919), a collection of drawings, poetry, and prose, and the poems of Le Cap de Bonne-Espérance (1919).
Cocteau's art received further stimulation from his intense love for the gifted young poet Raymond Radiguet. Their affair ended with Radiguet's death from typhoid at age twenty, but not before the younger poet had guided Cocteau away from modernism and toward a more classical formality.
In the years between the two world wars, Cocteau wrote his first novel ( Le grand écart, 1923), his first nonmusical play ( Antigone, 1922), and his first film ( Le sang d'un poète, 1932). For the rest of his life, in spite of his struggles with opium addiction, he continued to produce an enormous quantity of work and maintained his public prominence.
In 1949 Cocteau was made Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur. In 1955 he was elected to the Académie Royale de Langue et de Littérature Françaises of Belgium and also to the Académie Française.
He died October 11, 1963, and is buried in the chapel of Saint-Blaise-des-Simples in Milly-la-Forêt, France.
Jean Cocteau met Kurt Weill in Paris in 1930, and the two were in touch again when Weill moved to Paris in 1933.
They collaborated in the production of two songs for Marlene Dietrich ("Der Lügner" and "Es regnet," of which only the second was finished by Weill) and began to work together on a version of Faust which was abandoned due, apparently, to nothing more than inopportune circumstances. Cocteau, in inscribing his "Poèmes écrits en allemand" to the composer, wrote that "leur seule excuse, c'est de vous avoir plu."
Jean Cocteau, the French poet, playwright and film director, was born in Maisons-Lafitte, near Paris, in 1889. Success came early to Cocteau with La Lampe d'Aladin (1909, Aladdin's Lamp ), and he exploited it. He ran the gamut of experience, first enjoying a spectacular conversion to Roman Catholicism through Jacques Maritain. This was followed by a scornful repudiation of his mentor, the use of opium and a search for salvation through solitude. Nevertheless he had astonishing success with whatever he touched, and figured as sponsor of Picasso, Stravinsky, Giorgio de Chirico and the group of young French composers known as Les Six. As an actor, director, scenario writer, novelist, critic and artist, his work was marked by vivacity and a pyrotechnic brilliance. He was elected to the Academie Francaise in 1955.
Significant works are his novels: Le Grand ecart (1923, Eng trans The Grand Escort, 1925), Thomas l'imposteur (1923, Eng trans Thomas the Imposter, 1925), Les Enfants terribles (1929, Eng trans Children of the Game, 1929); and plays: Les Maries de la Tour Eiffel (1921, Eng trans The Eiffel Tower Wedding Party, 1963), Orphee (1926, Eng trans Orpheus, 1933) and L'Aigle a deux tetes (1946, Eng trans The Eagle has Two Heads, 1948). His films include Le Sang d'un po'ete (1930, The Blood of a Poet ), La Belle et la bete (1945, Beauty and the Beast ), Orphee (adapted from his play, 1949) and Le Testament d'Orphee (1960). [From Chambers Biographical Dictionary (1997)]
Cocteau was a French visual artist, writer, and film maker; his film Blood of a Poet (Le sang d’un poète) had its premiere in 1932 in Paris.
Epithet: author and artist
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External Related CPF
https://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb11897143s/PUBLIC
https://viaf.org/viaf/12306661
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n79007043
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n79007043
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q83158
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Art
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Authors, French
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