Éva Circé-Côté Explained
Éva Circé-Côté |
Birth Name: | Éva Circé |
Birth Date: | 31 January 1871 |
Death Date: | 1949 |
Other Names: | Colombine, Musette, Jean Nay, Fantasio, Arthur Maheu, Julien Saint-Michel, Paul S. Bédard |
Occupation: | Journalist |
Éva Circé-Côté (1871–1949), born Éva Circé in Montreal, was a journalist, a poet, and a librarian who established Montreal's first public library in 1903. She wrote under several pseudonyms during her lifetime, including Colombine, Musette, Jean Nay, Fantasio, Arthur Maheu, Julien Saint-Michel, and Paul S. Bédard.
Works
Plays
- 1903 : Hindelang et DeLorimier (historical drama in five Acts)
- 1904 : Le Fumeur endiablé (One-act play)
- 1921 : Maisonneuve (historical drama in four Acts)
- 1922 : L'Anglomanie (3-act play, awarded the prix de l'Action française)
Poetry
- 1903: Bleu, Blanc, Rouge. Poésie, paysages, causeries. (Collection of poems and essays, under the pseudonym Colombine), Déom Frères éditeurs, Montréal, 1903
Essays
- 1924: Papineau, son influence sur la pensée canadienne; essai de psychologie historique, Ève Circé-Côté (editor), R.A. Regnault & cie imprimeurs, Montréal, 1924. Republished: Lux, Montréal, 2002, 266 pages .
Articles available on-line
References