If you’ve watched the movie, or read the book Les Misérables, then why not check out the top interesting facts about author, Victor Hugo.
- His full name was Victor Marie Hugo.
- He was born on 26th February 1802, in Besançon, France.
- He died on 22nd May 1885, in Paris, France.
- He had two brothers – Abel and Eugene.
- His father was a Napoleonic general.
- His parents separated when he was sixteen.
- For his book of poetry verses, Hugo was granted multiple gifts and a 3000 franc pension from King Louis XVIII.
- In 1822, Hugo married his childhood sweetheart, Adele Foucher.
- The couple had many children: Léopold who died in infancy (1823), Léopoldine (1824), Charles (1826), François-Victor (1828), and Adele (1830).
- His first novel Han d’Islande was published in 1823.
- His first full length novel was published in 1831, entitled Notre-Dame de Paris. In English, this is known as The Hunchback of Notre-Dame.
- The Hunchback of Notre-Dame was released in 1996 as an animated Disney feature film.
- Hugo began planning his most famous work Les Misérables in the 1830’s. It was finally published in 1862.
- Les Misérables gave his publisher over half a million francs over six years.
- The book has five segments: Fantine, Cosette, Marius, The Idyll in the Rue Plumet and the Epic in the Rue St. Denis, and finally, Jean Valjean.
- It is considered to be one of the longest novels in history.
- In 1851, Hugo decided to live in exile following Napoleon III’s coup d’état.
- In 1881, Hugo was recognized by a group of Belgians who broke his windows and doors, shouting “Down with Victor Hugo, Down with Jean Valjean!”
- In 1878, he suffered from a minor stroke.
- The entire population of France celebrated his eightieth birthday.
- When he approached his deathbed, he asked for a pauper’s funeral.
- When Hugo died, his coffin was laid under the Arc de Triomphe for an all-night vigil. The funeral procession took six hours to pass.
- Hugo identified himself as a Catholic and held a great amount of respect for the church.
- Hugo was a supporter of Romanticism and Republicanism.
- The original musical of Les Misérables opened at the Barbican Center in London on 8th October, 1985.
- It is the longest running musical on West End.
- The emblem is the young Cosette, which is based upon the Emile Bayard novel illustration.
- The show has won multiple Tony Awards, including ‘Best Book of a Musical’.
Read more: https://topfactsite.com/30-fast-facts-about-victor-hugo/