Baptiste

French actor
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Also known as: Baptiste the Elder, Nicolas Anselme
Quick Facts
Original name:
Nicolas Anselme
Born:
June 18, 1761, Bordeaux, France
Died:
Nov. 30/Dec. 1, 1835, Les Batignolles
Also Known As:
Nicolas Anselme
Baptiste the Elder

Baptiste (born June 18, 1761, Bordeaux, France—died Nov. 30/Dec. 1, 1835, Les Batignolles) was one of the leading actors of sentimental comedy (comédie larmoyante) in France.

After two provincial engagements, Baptiste went to Paris in 1791. In 1793 he joined the Théâtre de la République and in 1799 the Comédie-Française, from which he retired in 1828. He was not successful in tragedy. Parisians of the Napoleonic era primarily associated him with the noble fathers in such plays as Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais’s Eugénie (1767) and Denis Diderot’s Père de famille (1758). His greatest achievement was in the title role of Philippe-Néricault Destouches’s masterpiece Glorieux. Known as Baptiste the Elder, he was survived by his brother Paul-Eustache Anselme, called Baptiste the Younger, who had made a name for himself as a comedian.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.