Edmond Rostand was a prominent French playwright and poet.
Rostand, who was born in Marseille on 1 April, 1868, the son of the
distinguished economist Eugene Rostand (1843-1915), first achieved
success in Paris at the age of twenty with his vaudeville sketch 'Le
Gant Rouge". A collection of poems in 1890 entitled "Les Musardises",
would also be well received. Not before too long his works were being
compared to that of Belgian poet and playwright
Maurice Maeterlinck (1862-1949).
Some of Rostand's more successful plays were: "Les Romonesques" (1894),
"La Princess Lomtain" (1895), "La Samaritaine" (1897), "Cyrano de
Bergerac" (1897), "Aiglon" (1901) and "Chantecler" (1910). Many of
Rostand's plays were popular on both sides of the Atlantic. The
American rights to "Chantecler" alone would make him a small fortune.
Edmund Rostand was a member of L'Académie française and a commander of
the Légion d'honneur. He had dined with King Edward IV at Biarritz and
read "Cyrano de Bergerac" to an audience of Paris laborers. At the
outbreak of World War One his offer to enlist was politely turned down
by French officials. After the sinking of the Lusitania, he wrote a
long poem condemning the German ambassador to America. Rostand passed
away on 2 December, 1918 after a bout of influenza. Besides his son,
Jean Rostand, he was survived by his wife,
Rosemonde Gerard (1871-1953), a grand-daughter of Count Etienne Gerard
(1773-1852), a veteran of the Napoleonic Wars.