Educated by the
Oratorians, Dazincourt entered the service of the
maréchal de Richelieu in 1766 and had a taste of acting in comedies of manners. Deciding to make this his profession, he left Paris in secret for Brussels to study under
D'Hannetaire, then at the peak of his reputation. After acting at the
Théâtre de la Monnaie from 1771 to 1776, Dazincourt returned to Paris and made his debut at the
Comédie-Française on 21 November 1776 in the rôle of Crispin in
Les Folies amoureuses by
Jean-François Regnard. He became a
sociétaire of this theatre in 1778 and remained one until his death. In December 1776 the
Mercure de France commented on his debuts: "This actor has a well-formed talent, a reasoned manner, and much intelligence, finesse and truth-to-life. He is a good comic-actor without being a
farceur, and pleasing without being anything more." During the night of 2 September 1793, he and 12 other actors of the
Théâtre Français also felt to have remained faithful to the monarchy were arrested and imprisoned in the
prison des Madelonnettes, for putting on the allegedly seditious play "
Pamela". His greatest role was that of
Figaro in
Le Mariage de Figaro. His memoirs were published by Henri-Alexis Cahaisse in the year of his death. == References ==