Henri Meilhac Tickets | 2025-2026 Tour & Event Dates | GoComGo.com

Henri Meilhac Tickets

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Operetta
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23 Jun 2026, Tue
Composer: Jacques Offenbach
Cast: Alexandra Cravero
Opera
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24 Jun 2026, Wed
Cast: Alexandra Cravero
Opera
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25 Jun 2026, Thu
Composer: Georges Bizet
Operetta
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27 Jun 2026, Sat
Cast: Alexandra Cravero
Opera
Operetta
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28 Jun 2026, Sun
Cast: Alexandra Cravero
View Tickets from 79 US$

Latest booking: 41 minutes ago

Operetta
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29 Jun 2026, Mon
Cast: Alexandra Cravero
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4 Jul 2026, Sat
Cast: Alexandra Cravero
Operetta
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5 Jul 2026, Sun
Cast: Alexandra Cravero
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Operetta
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7 Jul 2026, Tue
Cast: Alexandra Cravero
Operetta
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8 Jul 2026, Wed
Cast: Alexandra Cravero
Operetta
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10 Jul 2026, Fri
Cast: Alexandra Cravero
View Tickets from 79 US$

Latest booking: 8 hours ago

Operetta
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11 Jul 2026, Sat
Cast: Alexandra Cravero
View Tickets from 79 US$

Booked 1 times today

About

Henri Meilhac (23 February 1830 – 6 July 1897) was a French dramatist and opera librettist.

Meilhac was born in the 1st arrondissement of Paris in 1830. As a young man, he began writing fanciful articles for Parisian newspapers and comédies en vaudevilles, in a vivacious boulevardier spirit which brought him to the forefront. About 1860, he met Ludovic Halévy, and their collaboration for the stage lasted twenty years.

Their most famous collaboration is the libretto for Georges Bizet's Carmen. However, Meilhac's work is most closely tied to the music of Jacques Offenbach, for whom he wrote over a dozen librettos, most of them together with Halévy. The most successful collaborations with Offenbach are La belle Hélène (1864), Barbe-bleue (1866), La Vie parisienne (1866), La Grande-Duchesse de Gérolstein (1867), and La Périchole (1868).

Other librettos by Meilhac include Jules Massenet's Manon (with Philippe Gille) (1884), Hervé's Mam'zelle Nitouche (1883), and Rip, the French version of Robert Planquette's operetta Rip Van Winkle (also with Gille). Their vaudeville play Le réveillon was the basis of the operetta Die Fledermaus.

In 1888 he was elected to the Académie française. He died in Paris in 1897.

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