Michel Puig

[1] In 1975 he composed a chamber opera Stigmates, to a libretto by Jacques Pajak.

26, a one-act work for three actors and a small instrumental ensemble (1974) was staged by Michael Lonsdale at the Théâtre des Amandiers, Nanterre.

[5] His Monet ou la passion de la réalité, a one-act work for solo actress accompanied by clarinet, violin and piano, was first performed at the Semaines musicales internationales d'Orléans in 1979.

[6] Puig composed the music for a 1965 adaptation of Molière's The School for Wives starring François Périer,[7] and set Lewis Carroll's The Hunting of the Snark for a cast of five actresses and eight actors and an instrumental ensemble of five players, premiered at the Festival d'Avignon in 1971.

[8] Puig was for some time a teacher; his former students include Michèle Bokanowski.