Costache Caragiale
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- Died:
- Feb. 13, 1877, Bucharest, Rom.
Costache Caragiale (born March 29, 1815, Bucharest, Walachia, Ottoman Empire [now in Romania]—died Feb. 13, 1877, Bucharest, Rom.) was an actor-manager who helped to encourage the development of a unique Romanian drama.
Caragiale made his stage debut in 1835 in Bucharest, and in 1838 he organized a theatre of contemporary drama in Iași (now Jassy). During the next 15 years he worked with regional theatres, notably those in Iași, Botoșani, and Craiova, where he promoted the plays of the most talented dramatists of the period, including Vasile Alecsandri and Constantin Negruzzi. He returned to Bucharest in 1850, and two years later he was named director of the National Theatre.
His nephew Ion Luca Caragiale became one of Romania’s greatest playwrights, and his younger brother Iorgu was a successful actor and director in Iași and other provincial towns. In 1887 Iorgu constructed his own theatre in Bucharest.