

170
SAND George (1804 - 1876)
The item was sold for 260 €
Fees include commission and taxes.
SAND George (1804 - 1876)
L.A.S. "G. Sand", Nohant November 28, 1857, to a friend [Antoine, comte d'AURE]| 5 pages in-12 in her own number, blue ink.
About the young actress Marie Lambert, to whom she would like to give the role of Mario in the play that Paul Meurice wants to draw from his novel Les Beaux Messieurs de Bois-Doré.
"I hope that my diplomacy will succeed, since Marie writes me that she is in an emerald-colored crystal. Let's hope that Paul Meurice's intention for the play becomes a reality. It would be for the little one, one of those good fortunes that one grabs by the hair.
Whether the play is a success or not, the debutante would be placed before the public in special conditions and would not have to wipe the boards, in unnoticed and worn out roles, for years.
If you can make sure that she only has a commitment to start in a new and brilliant role, she will be afloat"... She thanks him for all his kindnesses for her protégés, as well as for the servant whom she does not take, because she has a good man on hand on whom she can count: "this one will certainly like himself at my place, whereas the valet of room having made his training course in Paris in a rich house and on a great foot, will be very probably bored with our valets, Berrichons and peasants, during our long winters, in a house which, after the season of the visits and amusements, becomes again a large cloister"...
Correspondence, t. XXV, S847.
L.A.S. "G. Sand", Nohant November 28, 1857, to a friend [Antoine, comte d'AURE]| 5 pages in-12 in her own number, blue ink.
About the young actress Marie Lambert, to whom she would like to give the role of Mario in the play that Paul Meurice wants to draw from his novel Les Beaux Messieurs de Bois-Doré.
"I hope that my diplomacy will succeed, since Marie writes me that she is in an emerald-colored crystal. Let's hope that Paul Meurice's intention for the play becomes a reality. It would be for the little one, one of those good fortunes that one grabs by the hair.
Whether the play is a success or not, the debutante would be placed before the public in special conditions and would not have to wipe the boards, in unnoticed and worn out roles, for years.
If you can make sure that she only has a commitment to start in a new and brilliant role, she will be afloat"... She thanks him for all his kindnesses for her protégés, as well as for the servant whom she does not take, because she has a good man on hand on whom she can count: "this one will certainly like himself at my place, whereas the valet of room having made his training course in Paris in a rich house and on a great foot, will be very probably bored with our valets, Berrichons and peasants, during our long winters, in a house which, after the season of the visits and amusements, becomes again a large cloister"...
Correspondence, t. XXV, S847.
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