Jacques Copeau (born Feb. 4, 1879, Paris, Fr.—died Oct. 20, 1949, Beaune) was a French actor, literary critic, stage director, and dramatic coach who led a reaction against realism in early 20th-century theatre.
After a brief career as an art dealer, Copeau became drama critic for L’Ermitage (1904–06) and La Grand Revue (1907–10). In 1909, with André Gide, Jean Schlumberger, and others, he founded La Nouvelle Revue Française and edited it until 1911. His adaptation of Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s Brothers Karamazov, written in collaboration with Jean Croué, was staged in 1911.
In 1913 Copeau founded the Théâtre du Vieux-Colombier (from 1961 the Théâtre du Vieux-Colombier-Jacques Copeau), where he produced dramatic works ranging from those of William Shakespeare to the 20th-century plays of such writers as Paul Claudel. Seeking to break down the barrier between actor and audience, he redesigned his theatre in 1920 as a reconstruction of the Elizabethan apron stage without the proscenium arch and with simple screens to suggest locale. The atmosphere of each play was created almost entirely by lighting.
Emphasizing the play rather than its trappings, Copeau concentrated on training actors, and eventually his company ranked with the great Moscow Art Theatre of Konstantin Stanislavsky. In 1917 Copeau took his company to New York City, and in 1924 he left the Vieux-Colombier and moved his school of young actors to Burgundy. There, besides studying acting, they were employed throughout the countryside, the peasants calling them “Les Copiaux,” under which name they first appeared at Basel in 1926. The new company—which toured Europe and had its own playwright, André Obey—was taken over by Michel Saint-Denis in 1930.
One of Copeau’s greatest contributions to the theatre was his idea of a permanent architectural stage for modern productions.