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From February 17 to March 20, 1977, the play Le Cid Maghané was presented in the Octave-Crémazie Hall, seating just over 500 people. A parody of playwright Pierre Corneille’s play, this work by Réjean Ducharme features a Quebec version in joual, the working-class dialect of Montréal French. Yvan Canuel directed this version.
1958 - 2016

The Grand Théâtre de Québec, a legacy of the Quiet Revolution

The Grand Théâtre de Québec was supposed to be built in time to mark the centenary of Canadian Confederation in 1967. After various ups and downs, the theatre was inaugurated on January 16, 1971, near Parliament Hill. The theatre was created to provide Québec City with a large-scale cultural complex. It includes the Octave-Crémazie (500 seats) and Louis-Fréchette (1,800 seats) performance halls, as well as the Conservatoire de Musique. A famous phrase by poet Claude Péloquin is written on the mural inside the Grand Théâtre. Over the years, the Grand Théâtre’s stages have welcomed a host of artists and groups.

Le Cid Maghané theatre production

André Boucher From February 17 to March 20, 1977, the play Le Cid Maghané was presented in the Octave-Crémazie Hall, seating just over 500 people. A parody of playwright Pierre Corneille’s play, this work by Réjean Ducharme features a Quebec version in joual, the working-class dialect of Montréal French. Yvan Canuel directed this version.
Chronoscope Can you identify the two actresses on stage? (unilingual French for a limited time) Source: Ville de Québec All rights reserved: Ville de Québec - André Boucher Fonds - 1977