Histoire du terrible chevalier Fichtou

Manuscript

28 pages

Histoire du terrible chevalier Fichtou

| Around 1890 | Liège, Belgium
Genre (as defined by the author)
Pièce comique pour théâtres et les marionnettes
Characters
Fichtou, Caratchou, Le roi de la Drap d'Maison, Le prince Drap d'chiel à Bouton, La princesse de la Cafougnac, Un Paysan
Number of acts
1
Note

This handwritten play has been kept in the Museum of Walloon Life in Liège since 1916. It is registered in the museum’s catalogue with the following indication: “Pierre-Paul Pinet’s transcription of a puppet play by the Comte de Tressan”. This indication may seem trivial because Louis-Élisabeth de la Vergne, Comte de Tressan (1705-1783) and member of the Académie Française, wrote adaptations of chivalric romances from the Middle Ages. However, he never wrote puppet plays, let alone in Pinet’s Liège dialect. This play is therefore a parody of the chivalry romances which Tressan helped popularise.

Plot summary

The fight between two knights

The knight Fichtou arrives on stage breathless: he hit an old man in the forest and his horse died by accident. He says goodbye to his horse then leaves the stage. The admiral Caratchou, a pagan, arrives. He is looking for adventures and decides to stay near a bridge to keep people from crossing it. Then he relates his various achievements. The knight Fichtou comes back and they both fight. Fichtou wounds Caratchou and forces him to abjure his religion, before fetching something to drink for him. He comes back with a watering can he took from a farmer after fighting him. Caratchou asks Fichtou to bring him the balms in his luggage to heal his wounds. He coats himself in the balms then stands up, healed, and says goodbye to Fichtou as he leaves, but he forgets his pants. Fichtou meets the Roi (king) de la Drap d’Maison and the prince Drap d’chiel à Bouton and tells them how he has freed the bridge. The prince brags about having won a duel against Caratchou. Then the three of them go have something to eat but the king can only afford some paltry leftovers meant for the cat. The king and prince go hunting. Fichtou meets a farmer and asks him to fetch his wife. He reunites with his wife and asks why she looks so unwell. Fichtou relates his fight against Caratchou and asks her wife why she is so pale. The princess tells him that she has given birth to a stillborn child, who was almost three metres high, and that they had to fold him in half to bury him. They both decide to go have a meal.

Composition date
Around 1890

Publications and translations

Conservation place

Musée de la Vie Wallonne, Liège - Liège, Belgium
Language
French
Literary tones
Comical, Epic
Animations techniques
Single rod marionettes
Audience
Not specified
Licence
Public domain

Key-words

Theatrical techniques

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Written by

Didier Plassard