Sardou, Victorien
Related Category: French Literature: Biographies
(vēktôryăN´ särd

´), 18311908, French dramatist. Author of some 70 plays, he won great popularity with his light comedies and pretentious historical pieces, but his reputation later declined. His best farce comedy is
Divorçons! (1880, tr. 1881). Among his semihistorical melodramas are
Patrie! (1869, tr. 1915) and
Fédora (1882, tr. 1883), in which Sarah Bernhardt made her triumphant return to the Paris stage. Sardou's other plays written for her are
La Tosca (1887, tr. 1925), the source of Puccini's opera, and
Cléopâtre (1890). Two plays written for Sir Henry Irving,
Robespierre (1899) and
Dante (1903), were never given in French. Also among his plays in a lighter vein is
Madame Sans-Gêne (1893, tr. 1901). Sardou was attacked for plagiarism but defended himself successfully. He was elected to the French Academy.