a light, comic play with topical songs and dances. Vaudeville originated in France and takes its name from the valley of the Vire River (Vau-de-Vire), where the popular singer O. Basselin lived in the 15th century. Originally, songs in comedies at fairs in the first half of the 18th century were called vaudeville.
Vaudeville emerged as an independent theatrical genre during the Great French Revolution and soon became wide-spread in Europe. According to A. I. Herzen, the classics of French vaudeville— E. Scribe and E. Labiche—preserved many features of vaudeville as a “French popular creation,” including its provocative hilarity and allusions to evils of the day. Vaudeville first appeared in Russia in the early 19th century, inheriting an interest in Russian subjects from 18th-century comic opera. Its early development is associated with the names of A. I. Pisarev, N. I. Khmel’nitskii, A. S. Griboedov, and A. A. Shakhovskoi. In the late 1830’s and 1840’s it was characterized by democratic tendencies and a rapprochement with the realistic comedy of manners under the influence of the naturalist school (D. T. Lenskii’s Lev Gurych Sinichkin and vaudevilles by F. A. Koni, V. A. Sollogub, P. A. Karatygin, and N. A. Nekrasov). At the end of the 19th century, A. P. Chekhov’s one-act plays continued the vaudeville tradition (without the songs). In the Soviet period vaudevilles by V. P. Kataev, V. V. Shkvarkin, and others have been performed on the stage.
To a significant degree vaudeville is connected with the development of the comic actor’s art in the 19th century and with the struggle against the decrepit traditions of classicism. The actors’ performances in the best types of vaudeville were distinguished by a natural, ingenuous quality, improvisational lightness of dialogue, and a sense of humor: Vaudeville demanded that the actor be able to sing and dance. Actors mastered the art of transforming themselves completely into a character, performing several roles in one short play. The French actors V. Dejazet, C. G. Potier, P.-T. Levassor, E. Arnal, and others—brilliant vaudeville performers—were genuine heirs of the 18th-century theater’s democratic art who made a contribution to the development of a national singing culture. (For example, Dejazet was considered the best performer of P. Beranger’s songs.) In the Russian theater brilliant comic actors whose basic repertoire was the light comedy—N. O. Diur, V. N. Asenkova, N. V. Samoilova, and V.I. Zhivokini—as well as major realistic actors, including M. S. Shchepkin, I. I. Sosnitskii, A. E. Martynov, K. A. Varlamov, and V. N. Davydov, performed in vaudeville. They contributed a psychological subtlety and satirical sharpness to the performance of vaudeville.
The Soviet theater has trained directors with a feeling for vaudeville (R. N. Simonov, N. P. Akimov, and others) and actors who have mastered the art of performing vaudeville (V. la. Khenkin, P. N. Pol’, F. N. Kurikhin, A. D. Beniaminov, N. I. Slonova, S. A. Martinson, and others).