Biography
					Georges Bizet was a child prodigy. Entering the Paris  Conservatory at the age of nine, he counted among his teachers Antoine  Marmontel, François Benoist and Jacques Halévy. At nineteen Bizet won a  Prix de Rome. That same year he wrote his first opera, 'Le Docteur  Miracle', a one-act comedy. After his studies in Italy he returned to  Paris with the intention of writing music for the stage. His 'Les  Pêcheurs de perles' (1863), 'La jolie fille de Perth' (1867) and  'Djamileh' however met no more than moderate success. Bizet remained in  relative obscurity until 1872, when his incidental music for Daudet's  "L'Arlésienne" won him a degree of fame. It was at the suggestion of  Camille du Locle, director of the Opéra-Comique, that Bizet composed his  opera 'Carmen'. Bizet's librettists, Henri Leilhac and Ludovic Halévy,  had based their adaptation on a short novel by Prosper Mérimée. After  initial bad reviews, today 'Carmen' is probably the most known opera in  the world. The composer's strong dramatic sense, sensuous melodies,  vivid orchestration and pulsating rhythms combine into what more than  one critic has termed "the perfect opera."
- IMDb Mini Biography By:  Marcos Eduardo Acosta Aldrete
															Birthday: 1838-10-25