Angelique-Madeleine Cenas
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Spouses
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Pierre-Henri de Moulinneuf, dit Montroze
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Also known as
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Mademoiselle Cénas Mademoiselle Cénas l'aînée Mademoiselle Coudurier
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Biography
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Birth date
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1757
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Death
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After 1790?volume=1&index=377 Dictionnaire Cesar - Calendrier électronique des spectacles sous l'Ancien Régime et sous la Révolution.]
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Biographical entries in old dictionaries
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Angélique-Madeleine Cénas was born in Stockholm on 14 May 1757. Her mother, Barbe-Marguerite Henry, was an actress in the theater troupe of the king of Sweden, in which country she married Jean-Baptiste Coudurier, a silk merchant, on 4 May 1755. After his death she married Gaspard Cénas, dancing master at the Swedish court, in 1770.Accompanied by her mother and younger sister Thérèse-Antoinette, Mlle Cénas performed in Rouen in 1773, and the following year in Lille, where she received "thunderous applause" playing ingénues. Her mother then tried to get the family hired in Brussels. In a letter addressed to Louis Compain, director of the Theatre de la Monnaie, Mme Cénas suggested that her daughter could play ingénues and leading lady in comedies and comic operas, as well as youthful roles in tragedies. In turn, she could play leading confidents in tragedies, supporting roles, grimes (elderly comic characters), rôles à baguette (queen parts) and peasants in comedies; the younger sister could play minor soubrettes, while the husband could appear in ballets. [Royal General Archives in Brussels, Manuscript collection, 3847]. The director of the Théâtre de la Monnaie does not seem to have taken up the offer. We next find Mlle Cénas on her own in The Hague in 1778 and 1779, where she gave several performances for her own profit, playing for instance in Marivaux's School for Mothers and in Monsigny's La Belle Arsène.
Starting with the 1779-80 season, she was hired as head singer in Brussels where on 5 November 1781, she married the countertenor Pierre-Henri de Moulinneuf, known as Montroze (not to be confused with the Barizain family of actors, who went by the name of Monrose); she became the leading soubrette during the 1782-1783 season. She then obtained an order to make her debut in Paris, appearing at the Théâtre Italien on 23 May 1783. A week later, she made another debut at the Comédie-Française. In spite of the lessons she took from Mlle Doligny, she was not accepted in either of the two theatres. From 1784 to 1787 the couple performed in Amsterdam, where they had three children, then from 1788 to1790 in Liege. After that we lose all trace of Mlle Cénas-Montroze, who apparently left the stage.
Contemporary chroniclers said little about the talents of this actress, whose relatively short career was primarily in minor theatres. Today, her name has disappeared from the histories of the theatre dealing with 18th century actors and actresses.
(translated by Michelle Sommers)
Works
Selected bibliography
Selected bibliography of images
Reception