Molière, during his fourteen years in Paris,…
February 1673 CE
Molière, during his fourteen years in Paris, has single-handedly written thirty-one of the eighty-five plays performed on his stage while simultaneously holding his company together.
Now fifty-one, he suffers from pulmonary tuberculosis, possibly contracted when he was imprisoned for debt as a young man.
One of the most famous moments in Molière's life is his last, which becomes legend: he collapses on stage in a fit of coughing and hemorrhaging while performing in the last play he has written, which has lavish ballets performed to the music of Marc-Antoine Charpentier and which ironically is entitled Le Malade imaginaire (The Imaginary Invalid).
Molière insists on completing his performance.
Afterwards he collapses again with another, larger hemorrhage before being taken home, where he dies a few hours later, without receiving the last rites because two priests refuse to visit him while a third arrives too late.
The superstition that green brings bad luck to actors is said to originate from the color of the clothing he is wearing at the time of his death.