Mireille Havet
Appearance
Mireille Havet ( 4 October 1898, Médan – 21 March 1932, Crans-Montana, Switzerland) was a French poet, diarist, novelist, and lyricist.
She wrote lyrics for songs composed by John Alden Carpenter and intended for Éva Gauthier.[1] She wrote a novel, Carnaval, published in 1923. She was friends with Jean Cocteau and Colette, who referred to her as "la petite poyétesse".[2]
Her diary, which she kept from 1913 to 1929, was only found again in 1995, and published in 2003.[2]
On 29 January 2009, a public square was named after her in Paris.[3]
References
[edit]- ^ Howard Pollack, John Alden Carpenter: A Chicago Composer (Music in American Life), University of Illinois Press, 2001, p. 252 [1]
- ^ a b c La Quinzaine Littéraire n°972, 1 July 2008
- ^ a b Ursula Del Aguila, 'Paris: une place au nom de la poétesse lesbienne Mireille Havet', Têtu, 29 January 2009 "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2009-02-03. Retrieved 2009-01-31.
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: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
Categories:
- 1898 births
- 1932 deaths
- People from Yvelines
- French lesbian writers
- French LGBTQ poets
- French LGBTQ novelists
- French women novelists
- French women poets
- 20th-century French poets
- 20th-century French novelists
- 20th-century French women writers
- 20th-century French LGBTQ people
- French novelist, 19th-century birth stubs
- French poet stubs