Jean Louvet

Belgian dramatist
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Quick Facts
Born:
September 28, 1934, La Louvière, Belgium
Died:
August 29, 2015, La Louvière
Founder:
Proletarian Theater

Jean Louvet (born September 28, 1934, La Louvière, Belgium—died August 29, 2015, La Louvière) was a Belgian playwright whose main subject was the lives and sufferings of the working class.

Louvet was the son of a miner. As a young man, he was influenced by Existentialism, and left-wing politics led him into work in the theatre. Strongly autobiographical, his work goes beyond ideology to embrace the history of the Walloon people of southern Belgium, about whom he writes with accuracy and affection. After a series of national strikes and much civil unrest in 1960–61, Louvet cofounded the Proletarian Theater of La Louvière, where his plays were first produced. His first work, Le Train du bon Dieu (1962; “The Good Lord’s Train”) is a didactic, fragmentary vision of working-class alienation. Among his many plays that followed are L’An I (1963; “The Year One”), which presents the dreams of a retired labourer; L’Amènagement (1979; “The Furnishings”), a critique of the petty bourgeoisie; and Le Coup de semonce (1995; figuratively, “The Shot Across the Bow” or “Warning Shot”), which dramatizes the 1945 Walloon Congress.

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