Aurélien Scholl (July 13, 1833 in Bordeaux – April 16, 1902), was a French author and journalist.
He was successively editor of Le Voltaire and of L'Écho de Paris. He wrote largely for the theatre, as well as a number of novels dealing with Parisian life.[1] He was included in the painting Music in the Tuileries, by Manet, as one of the flâneurs of the day.[citation needed]
Works
edit- Lettres à Mon Domestique (1854)
- L'Outrage (1867)
- Fleurs d'Adultère (1880)
- L'Orgie Parisienne (1883)
- La Farce Politique (1887)
- Les Ingénues de Paris (1893)
- Denise (1894)
- Tableaux Vivants (1896)
- Les petits papiers. Comédie en un acte (1897)
- L'esprit d'Aurelien Scholl (1925) edited by Léon Treich
References
edit- ^ public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Scholl, Aurelien". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 24 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 356. One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the