The manuscript of The
Little Prince
by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, never before shown in France, will be exhibited in Paris from February to June 2022, the Musée des arts décoratifs announced on Wednesday.
The aviator and writer had written and drawn this philosophical and poetic tale in New York and Long Island, between June and November 1942.
See also
The Little Prince
remains the most translated book in the world
The manuscript has not left the United States since.
The author had entrusted it to a friend, Silvia Hamilton, before leaving to fight from North Africa in the spring of 1943. This friend then sold it to the Morgan Library & Museum in 1968. This private institution will lend the manuscript to the MAD, which hosts the exhibition
Meet the Little Prince,
from February 17 to June 26 in its wing of the Louvre Palace.
See also
The Little Prince
lands at the Philharmonie de Paris for an illustrated musical tale
The exhibition will include "
more than 600 pieces
", including "
watercolors, sketches and drawings - for the most part unpublished - but also photographs, poems, newspaper clippings and extracts from correspondence,
" the Museum said in a statement.
The Little Prince
, which tells the adventures on various planets of a naive but philosophical boy, is one of the greatest successes in the history of world literature. After its publication in French and English in New York in 1943, Saint-Exupéry was killed during a mission in the Mediterranean in July 1944. The author therefore knew nothing of the prodigious fate of this work published in France only in 1946. and today translated into more than 300 languages.
The manuscript was exhibited in 2014 by the Morgan Library & Museum.
Originally over 30,000 words difficult to decipher, it was cut in half by a writer who sought the greatest simplicity of style possible.
Its global success also owes a lot to the watercolors which illustrate it and which engraved the image of the young character in the collective memory.