Marie-Anne-Catherine Quinault
Marie-Anne-Catherine Quinault (26 August 1695 – 1793) (known as l'aînée) was a French singer and composer.
Quinault was born in Strasbourg. Her father was the actor Jean Quinault (1656–1728), and one of her brothers was Jean-Baptiste-Maurice Quinault, a singer, composer, and actor. She made her debut at the Paris Opera in 1709 in Jean-Baptiste Lully's Bellérophon. She remained at the opera until 1713. In 1714 she began singing at the Comédie-Française, where she remained until 1722 (Anthony 2001). Quinault composed motets for the Royal Chapel at the Palace of Versailles. For one of these motets, thanks to the benevolence of the Duke of Orléans, she was awarded the first and last grand cordon of the Order of Saint Michael ever given to a woman (Fétis 1867).
She was the mistress first of Louis, the Duke of Orléans, and later of Philippe Jules François Mancini, the Duke of Nevers, to whom she may have secretly been married. This brought her into higher social spheres and earned her a pension on the King's privy-purse. She would spend 1723–1793 living in an apartment in the Louvre, at the Pavilion de L’Infante. She died in Paris in 1793 (Fétis 1867).
References
- Anthony, James R. 2001. "Quinault, Marie-Anne-Catherine", Grove Music Online (accessed March 29, 2020), grovemusic.com (subscription required).
- Fétis, François-Joseph. 1867. "Quinault (Marie-Anne)". Biographie universelle des musiciens et bibliographie générale de la musique, vol. 7, second edition. Librairie de Firmin-Didot Frères, Fils et cie.
Further reading
- Lamothe-Langon, Etienne-Léon. 1836. Mémoires de Mademoiselle Quinault ainée (de la Comédie-Française), duchesse de Nevers, Chevaliére de l'ordre royal de Saint-Michel, de 1715 à 1793, 2 vols. Paris: Ch. Allardin.
- Scott, Virginia. Women on the Stage in Early Modern France: 1540–1750. Cambridge University Press, 2010.