

One man's cringe quest to become fancy—Molière's 1670 roast still burns.
Le Bourgeois gentilhomme satirizes attempts at social climbing and the bourgeois personality, poking fun both at the vulgar, pretentious middle-class and the vain, snobbish aristocracy. The title is meant as an oxymoron: in Molière's France, a "gentleman" was by definition nobly born, and thus there could be no such thing as a bourgeois gentleman.
Acting
Michel Serrault's Jourdain—desperation wrapped in silk and delusion.
Production
Molière's original music and dance numbers preserved.
Director
Pierre Badel
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Molière wrote this for Louis XIV himself, roasting the very class the king's patronage created.
The 'Turkish ceremony' where Jourdain becomes a Mamamouchi was originally performed with the actual Turkish ambassador present—awkward.