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Le Tardieu

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Jean Tardieu dont nous fêterons en 2003 le centenaire de naissance, est, par excellence, le poète du rire, du bon mot, de l'imagination primesautière. Burlesque, cocasse, lyrique, sa poésie ne se prend pas la tête. Elle use des mots avec tendresse et drôlerie pour se faire des images. Elle se situe dans un monde qui n'est pas à proprement parler celui de l'enfance, mais plutôt celui du plaisir et de l'enchantement. Une poésie qui met joyeusement et sobrement l'esprit en éveil.
Nous avons choisi dix-neuf poèmes pour Le Tardieu dans différents recueils : Le Fleuve caché, La Part de l'ombre, L'accent grave et l'accent aigu.

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Réunit 19 poèmes de Jean Tardieu, poète du rire et du bon mot, dont l'univers est celui de l'enchantement et de la tendresse.

46 pages, Board book

First published April 15, 2003

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About the author

Jean Tardieu

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He earned a degree in literature and worked for a publishing house. He published several poetry collections in the 1930s before starting to write for the stage. After World War Two, Tardieu entered the world of radio and worked his way to head of dramatic programming and then director of programs at France-Music. The quality and success of French National Public Radio after World War Two has been attributed largely to Jean Tardieu.
Tardieu's works mingled with the ideals of the French New Theatre and used comedy to pick apart more traditional theatre. He is often associated with the Theatre of the Absurd.
Some of his work has been translated into English, including:
The Underground Lovers, and other experimental plays
Going...Going...Gone! The Client Dies Twice: Three Plays (Black Apollo Press, ISBN 1-900355-21-3)
The River Underground: Selected Poems & Prose
Some of his work is present in Julio Cortázar's 1963 novel Rayuela (Hopscotch). Tardieu's work is included in Chapter 152, entitled "The Abuse of Consciousness".
The French composer Germaine Tailleferre of Les Six, who was a harp student of Tardieu's mother Caroline Luigini and who first met Tardieu as a child, set several of Tardieu's poems to music notably in the "Concerto des Vaines Paroles" for Baritone Voice, Piano and Orchestra and in the cycle "Trois Poèmes de Jean Tardieu" for Voice and Piano.
He was a great friend of Jean René Bazaine who turned his poem L'Ombre, la branche into a fine illustrated art book.( Maeght Éditeur, 1977: 150 ex. with 16 colored litho's, 50 ex. with three added litho's.)

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