Jean Rotrou
Rotrou, Jean (1609-50). French dramatist. A lawyer by training, he combined this profession with the theatre, and his legal duties may have cost him his life: he became a magistrate in his native town of Dreux in 1639 (having bought an office), and the account given of his death is that he refused to leave the town during a plague epidemic, perceiving it as his duty to stay, and died of the disease. For some years he was employed to write plays for the Comédiens du Roi at the Hôtel de Bourgogne, but managed to free himself from this obligation in about 1634 (by which date he claimed to have written 30 plays), after which his output slowed down. He published 35 plays (17 tragicomedies, 12 comedies, 6 tragedies) and he may well have written 50 or more. He was one of Richelieu's ‘cinq auteurs’ and a friend, as well as a rival, of Pierre Corneille.
Rotrou drew some of his material from Seneca and the Greek dramatists, some from ancient historians, and much from Spanish sources (he was the first French dramatist to borrow from Spanish plays rather than novels or non-dramatic poetry). The plays most highly regarded by modern critics are three of the tragedies, Le Véritable saint Genest (performed 1645), Venceslas (performed 1647), and Cosroès (performed c.1648). Many other plays are interesting, however, whether for their connections with other texts, or for their own merits, or both. Antigone (1637) and Iphigénie en Aulide (1640) treat Greek subjects later handled by Racine in La Thébaïde (1664) and Iphigénie (1674), and Molière borrowed from several of Rotrou's comedies. Like his contemporaries, Rotrou adapts and changes his material considerably, and this leads to some happy inventions, such as the spirited wife of Polynice in Antigone, who strikes up a friendship with Antigone when she meets her for the first time after Polynice's death.
The early play La Bague de l'oubli (performed 1629, published 1635), a comedy, was the first play taken from a Spanish dramatic source (Lope de Vega's Sortija del olvido). Unlike previous French comedies it has a courtly setting and several royal characters. The ring mentioned in the title is magical and induces amnesia in the wearer. It is used in a plot aimed at dethroning a king, a subject similar to those used in tragicomedy; but there are several comic characters, such as the king's jester and an inept general and admiral, and a certain amount of indelicate language, as well as the amusing surprises caused by the action of the ring, so that the tragic possibilities are muted by the comic tone.
Classed as a tragicomedy, Laure persécutée (1637) presents the triumph of young love over a tyrannical and thoroughly unscrupulous father who happens to be a king and therefore has more power than fathers in comedy. Although forced to recognize the beauty and virtue of Laure, whom his son loves, the king does not relent until she is improbably discovered to be of royal birth. Although Laure is threatened by the king first with death and then with rape, the perils seem fairly easily averted, and the tone is not unlike that of Shakespearean comedies such as Much Ado About Nothing (which the plot in part resembles, Laure being traduced just as Hero is).
Rotrou's theatre has been characterized as baroque because of his fondness for devices such as disguise, real or feigned madness, illusory situations where a character is thought to be dead (or believes himself to be dead), ambiguity, or manipulations of dramatic illusion, as in Le Véritable saint Genest, through the play-within-a-play. It displays considerable freedom of technique, with violent action and spectacular effects on stage, numerous changes of place within a play, and expansiveness of time-scale. The language is often conspicuously rhetorical, in the sense both of stylized forms (stichomythia, monologues, passages of stanzaic verse) and of ornaments such as anaphora, apostrophe, and sententious utterances. The later plays still display this characteristic, while becoming more rigorous in form and showing more concern for bienséance, in keeping with current trends.
[Gillian Jondorf]
Bibliography
- J. Morel, Jean Rotrou, dramaturge de l'ambiguïté (1968)



