Raymond Poisson

Mainly a comic actor, he used the stage names Crispin in comedy and Belleroche in tragedy.

[1] Poisson joined the company of the Hôtel de Bourgogne in Paris, primarily as a comic rival to Molière, who played at the Palais-Royal.

[1] As a comedian Poisson wore a black servant costume in a Spanish style[1] and was noted for his stutter.

[2] He appropriated the character of Crispin from Scarron's L'Écolier de Salamanque (1654), playing it himself,[2] and wrote and appeared in Lubin (1660) and Le Baron de la Crasse (1661).

[3] His son Paul and his grandsons Philippe and Francois-Arnoul all became actors, whilst his granddaughter Madeleine-Angélique de Gomez became a writer.

Poisson as Crispin