French playwright and journalist (1850–1895)
François-Frédéric-Raoul Toché (7 October 1850 – 18 January 1895) was a French playwright and journalist.
Life and career
Toché was born on 7 October 1850 in Rueil, now known as Rueil-Malmaison , near Paris.[ 1] As a playwright he is known for his collaborations with Ernest Blum . He also collaborated with Émile de Najac and Paul Siraudin . He contributed to libretti for Jacques Offenbach , Gaston Serpette and Théodore Dubois .[ 1]
As a journalist he edited Le Gaulois under the pseudonym "Frimousse". His other pen names included Escopette, Raoul Tavel, Robert Triel and Gavroche.[ 1] [ 2] Between 1881 and 1885 he published annual retrospectives of theatrical productions in Paris[ 3]
Toché was made a chevalier of the Legion of Honour in 1893.[ 1] In desperate financial straits, caused by gambling debts, he killed himself on 18 January 1895 at Chantilly by shooting himself in the head.[ 2]
Stage works
Works to which Toche contributed include:
1877 – Chanteuse par amour
1878 – La revue des Variétés
1880 – Belle Lurette
1881 – La Noce d'Ambroise
1884 – Le Château de Tire-Larigot
1885 – Le Gazier
1885 – Le Petit chaperon rouge
1888 – Les Femmes nerveuses
1889 – Le Parfum
1890 – Les Miettes de l'année
1890 – Le Collectionneur
1890 – Le Cadenas
1890 – Paris fin de siècle
1892 – Le Monde ou l'on flirte
1893 – La maison Tamponin
1893 – Les Femmes des amis
1894 – Madame Mongodin.
Source: Bibliothèque nationale de France, and The New York Times .[ 1] [ 3]
References
^ a b c d e Raoul Toché , Bibliothèque nationale de France. Retrieved 9 December 2022
^ a b "Parisian Topics", Evening Standard , 21 January 1895, p. 5
^ a b "Suicide of Raoul Toché", The New York Times , 19 January 1895, p. 5
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