Antoine-François Ève, also known by the name Ève Demaillot and the pseudonyms Antoine-François Ève-Démaillot, Démaillot, Ève Démaillot, Desmaillot, Maillot, Des Maillots..., (21 May 1747 in Dole – 18 July 1814 in Dubois hospital in Paris) was a French comedian, man of letters, journalist and revolutionary.
Back in France, he was tutor to Saint-Just for some time and played comedies and opéras comiques.
An agent of the Committee of Public Safety in 1794, he was imprisoned for a while during the Thermidorian Reaction.
Dedicated to journalism and theater after his release, he directed the character of Madame Angot [fr] in several of his plays.
[1] Hostile to the regime introduced by Bonaparte after the coup of 18 Brumaire, he participated in the attempted coup led by general Malet in October 1812 and spent several years in jail under the Consulat and the Empire.