Louis Courtois

Juggler, physicist, and illusionist
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroJuggler, physicist, and illusionist
PlacesBelgium
isScientist Physicist Magician Entertainer Illusionist
Work fieldEntertainment Science
Gender
Male
Birth28 October 1785, Waasmunster, Belgium
DeathParis, France
Star signScorpio
Family
Children:Julie Courtois
The details

Biography

Louis Courtois, also known as Papa Courtois (Waasmunster, 28 October 1785 - Paris, November 1859), was a Belgian illusionist who performed in several European countries, including at the courts of the kings of France, Belgium and the Netherlands.

Portrait of Louis Courtois, ca. 1859

Louis learned magic from his father Jean-Baptiste, who had also performed in Belgium and the Netherlands. He started his own company with his wife, Marie-Jeanne Vangele, in 1812.

He obtained great fame with his shows where birds, bowls and coins appeared and disappeared in the theaters where he performed. He also introduced magical tricks from India and Egypt, and supplemented his shows with juggling performances.

Between 1813 and 1834, he and Marie-Jeanne had 18 children. Fourteen of them eventually became professional magicians and in 1850 "Papa Courtois" formed a company with ten of them, the "Courtois Family Theater," which generated considerable curiosity.

The most well-known among his children was Julienne-Reine, who called herself Julie Courtois (1813–1880). She married another Belgian illusionist, André-Joseph Grandsart (1813–1882). The couple founded a company called The Grandsart-Courtois Theater, which performed all over Europe. The Courtois Family Theater was continued after Papa Courtois’ death by his son Antoine-Léonard Courtois (1823–1901), who married Euphrosine Picolo, daughter of the Italian acrobat Jean-Baptiste Picolo (1790–1871), whose "Théâtre Picolo" had become well-known in France.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 20 Apr 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.