• Source: Pascal Bastia
    • Pascal Bastia (11 September 1908 – 12 July 2007) was a 20th-century French operetta composer, songwriter and screenwriter.


      Biography


      Pascal Bastia was the son of chansonnier-songwriter, singer, actor, filmmaker Jean Bastia (1878-1940), born in a family from the Corsican village of Vescovato. The cartoonist Georges Bastia and the film director Jean Bastia were his brothers.
      He made his debut aged 19 with two works written under the pseudonym Irving Paris, Ma Femme (1927) and Un joli monsieur, but encountered real success under his real name with the operetta Dix-neuf ans (1933). This play was the first to be inspired by light jazz introduced in France by Mireille and the Quintette du Hot Club de France around Stéphane Grappelli and Django Reinhardt. The latter appeared in the orchestra that accompanied the recordings of the play. In 1933, Dix-neuf ans was given 300 times at the Théâtre Daunou. The cast was composed of Éliane de Creus (later replaced by Suzy Delair) and Jean Sablon, surrounded by Lily Mounet, Jean Bastia, Reda Caire and some debutantes including Viviane Romance. The work was performed in the provinces, in Amsterdam and Oran. There were more than 1,500 performances.
      After the war, Pascal Bastia continued his career with ups and downs, mostly in the provinces with Mademoiselle Star (1945) or Gardes françaises (Reims, 1962). This last play was closer to opéra comique, like Georges van Parys's or Maurice Yvain's latest works. But he would never again find the success of Dix-neuf ans.
      Pascal Bastia was one of the first composers to not orchestrate his own scores, the American way: Ma Femme was orchestrated by André Sablon (elder brother of John), Un joli Monsieur by Mac Curthy, Dix-neuf ans by Jef de Murel and Michel Emer. On the other hand, he wrote most librettos and lyrics for his operettas.
      A singer-songwriter, his song were interpreted by the greatest: Jean Sablon, Joséphine Baker, Luc Barney. He also was the author of music and film scripts. He wrote the comedy Ce monde n'est pas pour les anges (1950, Théâtre Édouard VII).


      Main works


      1927: Ma femme
      1928: Un joli monsieur
      1933: Dix neuf ans
      1935: Le Groom s'en chargera
      1941: La Star et le champion
      1945: Mademoiselle Star
      1947: Quel beau voyage!
      1947: Perdigal
      1949: Priscilla
      1951: Ma Louisiane
      1953: Valets de cœur
      1957: Nouvelle Orléans
      1962: Les Gardes Françaises
      1973: Joli tambour
      1981: Le Chant du Far-West
      2000: L' Oncle du Brésil


      Screenwriter


      1960: Les Tortillards
      1962: La Vendetta
      1962: Un clair de lune à Maubeuge


      References




      External links


      BASTIA (Pascal) on Comédie-musicale
      Bastia Pascal on Operette-theatremusical

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