Having his
works being translated in almost a hundred languages and have been inspired
more than 200 motion pictures, we can say that Alexandre Dumas is the most
widely read French authors in the world. Born on 24 July 1802, his real name
was Dumas Davy de la Pailleterie. His grandfather is a French nobleman, while
his grandmother was a slave who born from mix French and African ancestor.
Dumas’ father—a general in Napoleon’s army—married to an inn keeper’s daughter.
When Thomas Alexandre Davy de la Pailleterie—Dumas’ father—joined the army, he
took his grandfather’s name Dumas.
Unfortunately,
Dumas was born during the hardest times of the family, his father being
imprisoned, then return home in poor condition, both in health and financial
state. After his father died, Dumas’ mother—incapable of giving him proper
education—encouraged her son to read everything they could obtain, and told him
stories about his late father’s bravery during his service to Napoleon, which
later on inspired Dumas’s vivid imagination of adventures.
After the
restoration of the monarchy, the twenty years old Dumas—having inherited his
family aristocratic reputation—moved to Paris and started a career at Palais
Royal in the office of Louis Philippe, Duke of Orléans and later become King
Louis. During this time Dumas began to write for magazines and plays for the
theatre. Although he was later famous as a novel writer, Dumas had been famous
as a successful dramatist before writing novels. He performed many romantic
historical dramas on the Paris stage, and later founded Théâtre Historique at
the Boulevard du Temple in Paris, which later became Opéra National.
His Writings
During the
early of Victorian era, serial stories became a new trend; and Dumas—saw an
opportunity for his career—re-wrote one of his plays into his first serial
novel, which was soon followed with his other novels. In writing the novels,
Dumas used to use services from assistants and collaborators. One of them was
Auguste Maquet who assisted Dumas in outlining the plot of The Count of Monte Cristo and assisted him in The Three Musketeers. After the success of both novels, Dumas
bought a land and built a château named Château de Monte Cristo (nicknamed
Château d'If). Although he had gained a great deal from his writing, Dumas did
not maintain his financial very well; he spent a lot to women and his guests at
his château has taken advantage of his generosity. Dumas then sold his château
and fled to Belgium to escape his creditors. The château has been restored and is
now become a museum, opened to public.
Château de Monte Cristo |
A separate
building where Dumas could work
privately, nicknamed the "Château d'If." |
Dumas’
workplace inside the Château d'If
|
His personal
life
After his
marriage with an actress, Ida Ferrier, Dumas kept his love adventures with some
women. From them he had at least four illegitimate children; one of them was
Dumas’ son with a dressmaker called Marie-Laure-Catherine Labay. In the
future—bearing the name of his father—Alexandre Dumas, fils would follow his
father’s step to become a writer and playwright.
Alexandre
Dumas, père died on 5 December 1870 at his son’s villa. At first he was buried
in the cemetery of Villers-Cotterêts, however at 2002 President Jacques Chirac
instructed to move his cemetery to the mausoleum of Pantheon, to be placed
among his fellow greatest French authors Èmile Zola and Victor Hugo. During the
ceremony—which was broadcasted on television—four Republican Guards dressed as Athos,
Porthos, Aramis and D’Artagnan brought Dumas’ coffin in a procession towards
the Pantheon. In his speech, Chirac also pronounced that ‘a wrong had now been
righted’ which was related to the racism thoughts against Dumas (being a mixed
race). About this, Dumas himself have written a particular short novel titled Georges, which addressed some of the
issues of race and the effects of colonialism. Dumas once remarked to a man who
insulted him about his mixed-race background: "My father was a mulatto, my grandfather was a Negro, and my
great-grandfather a monkey. You see, Sir, my family starts where yours ends."
His bibliography
Some of
Alexandre Dumas’ most famous novels:
The D’Artagnan
Romances:
- The Three Musketeers
- Twenty Years After
- The Vicomte of Bragelonne (= Ten Years Later) – usually divided into: The Vicomte de Bragelonne, Louise de la Vallière, and The Man In The Iron Mask.
The Count of
Monte Cristo
The Black
Tulip
La Reine
Margot
Source:
Wikipedia
Online-literature.org
What a wonderful post! I'm in the middle of The Count of Monte Cristo right now and so this was fascinating for me. I really want to visit the Chateau de Monte Cristo now!
ReplyDeleteYeah, it would be fantastic to get the feel of Dumas' personage, his spirit that must have reflected in the museum. Ah...if only I live in Europe...
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