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Article Feb 13, 10:13 PM

Molière Died on Stage — And Never Stopped Performing

On February 17, 1673, Jean-Baptiste Poquelin — known to the world as Molière — collapsed during a performance of his own play, *The Imaginary Invalid*. He was playing a hypochondriac. The universe, apparently, has a sick sense of humor. He died hours later, and the Catholic Church nearly refused him a burial. Three and a half centuries on, every sitcom you've ever laughed at, every satirical takedown of a pompous politician, every time someone calls out a fraud — that's Molière's ghost, still treading the boards.

Let's get something straight: Molière wasn't some dusty relic of French literature that teachers force-feed you between naps. The man was essentially the Dave Chappelle of 17th-century France — a comedian who made the powerful squirm in their velvet seats while the common folk howled with recognition. He didn't just write plays. He built comedic weapons.

Take *Tartuffe*, arguably his most dangerous work. Here's the premise: a religious con man worms his way into a wealthy family, seduces the wife, steals the estate, and does it all while quoting scripture. Sound familiar? It should. Every televangelist scandal, every cult exposé, every "spiritual leader" caught with his hand in the collection plate — Molière saw it coming 360 years ago. The play was banned almost immediately. King Louis XIV loved it privately but had to suppress it publicly because the Church threw an absolute fit. Archbishop Péréfixe threatened to excommunicate anyone who performed, watched, or even *read* the thing. Which, of course, only made everyone want to read it more. Molière had essentially invented the Streisand Effect two centuries before Barbara Streisand was born.

The genius of *Tartuffe* isn't that it attacks religion — it doesn't. It attacks hypocrisy wearing religion's clothes. And that distinction matters enormously. Molière wasn't an atheist throwing bombs. He was a moralist with a scalpel, and his target was anyone who used virtue as a costume. Replace "religious devotion" with "social justice" or "patriotism" or "wellness culture" and you've got a play that could premiere on Broadway tomorrow without changing a single thematic beat.

*The Misanthrope* is a different kind of masterpiece — quieter, darker, and honestly more uncomfortable to sit through if you're the kind of person who prides themselves on "telling it like it is." Alceste, the protagonist, hates social hypocrisy. He refuses to flatter, refuses to play nice, refuses to participate in the little white lies that grease the wheels of civilization. He's right about almost everything. And he's absolutely insufferable. Molière's joke — and it's a brutal one — is that being correct and being bearable are two entirely different skills. Every person you've ever muted on social media for being aggressively, exhaustingly right about everything? That's Alceste. Molière didn't just write a character; he diagnosed a personality disorder three centuries before Twitter made it an epidemic.

Then there's *The School for Wives*, which got Molière into a different kind of trouble. Arnolphe, a middle-aged control freak, raises a young girl in total ignorance specifically so she'll become his obedient wife. She falls in love with someone else anyway, because — surprise — you can't engineer a human being's heart no matter how thoroughly you isolate them. The play is essentially a demolition of the idea that women are objects to be programmed, and Molière staged it in 1662. For context, women wouldn't get the vote in France for another 282 years. The backlash was predictable: rival playwrights accused him of immorality, of undermining marriage, of corrupting youth. The same accusations that get hurled at every piece of art that dares to suggest women might be actual people.

What makes Molière's influence so eerily persistent is his method. He didn't moralize from a pulpit. He made you laugh first, and while your guard was down, he planted an idea that would itch for days. This is the template for every great satirist who followed — from Jonathan Swift to Mark Twain to Tina Fey. The structure of a Molière comedy — set up a fool, let them dig their own grave with their own words, then watch the inevitable collapse — is literally the DNA of modern sitcoms. Larry David's *Curb Your Enthusiasm* is basically *The Misanthrope* set in Los Angeles.

But here's what really gets me about the man: he chose comedy when tragedy was the prestige genre. In 17th-century France, writing tragedies was the path to intellectual respectability. Racine and Corneille were the "serious" playwrights. Comedy was considered low art — entertainment for the masses, not nourishment for the soul. Molière looked at that hierarchy and essentially said: "I'll take the masses, thanks." He understood something that elitist gatekeepers still struggle with — making people laugh about their own flaws is harder than making them cry about someone else's. And it changes more minds.

His death scene deserves its own paragraph because it's so perfectly, tragically, absurdly Molière. February 17, 1673. Fourth performance of *The Imaginary Invalid*. He's playing Argan, a man convinced he's dying despite being perfectly healthy. During the performance, Molière — who was actually gravely ill with tuberculosis — started coughing blood. He reportedly disguised the coughing as part of the comedy. The audience laughed. He finished the show. He died at his home on Rue de Richelieu a few hours later. A man who spent his life exposing the gap between appearance and reality died performing that exact gap. If a screenwriter pitched that ending, they'd be told it was too on the nose.

The Church's vindictiveness didn't end with his death. Because actors were considered sinful by the Catholic establishment, Molière was initially denied a Christian burial. His wife had to petition the King directly. Louis XIV intervened, but only partially — Molière was buried at night, with no ceremony, no priests, in a section of the cemetery reserved for unbaptized infants. France's greatest playwright, tossed into a hole in the dark. The institution he'd mocked in *Tartuffe* got its petty revenge.

Today, 353 years later, Molière's plays are performed more than those of any other French-language playwright. The Comédie-Française, France's national theater, is literally nicknamed "La Maison de Molière." The French language itself is sometimes called "the language of Molière," the way English is called "the language of Shakespeare." Not bad for a guy who was thrown into an unmarked grave.

So here's the thing that should haunt us, pleasantly, on this anniversary: the hypocrites Molière skewered in 1664 are alive and well in 2026. The Tartuffes have new costumes — they wear corporate sustainability badges, they post performative grief on social media, they weaponize empathy for personal gain. The Alcestes are still screaming into the void, correct and lonely. The Arnolphes still think they can control the people they claim to love. Molière didn't predict the future. He just understood that human nature doesn't have software updates. We're running the same buggy code we always were. And the only patch that ever worked, even temporarily, is laughter sharp enough to draw blood.

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"Write with the door closed, rewrite with the door open." — Stephen King