[1] In the late 1780s, she had a son with French architect Jacques Cellerier who designed the Théâtre de l'Ambigu-Comique.
[3] Within two years, she was promoted to the rank, a position she shared for a long period with Madame Gardel, and later with the dancer Clotilde Mafleuroy.
Mlle Chevigny was selected by Louis Milon, the Academy's assistant ballet-master, for a role in the ballet Les Noces de Gamache in 1801.
[4] Mlle Chevigny's portrayal of Eurycleia, Ulysses' nurse, in Le Retour d'Ulysse by Louis Milon, which premiered on 27 February 1807, was a great success.
[8] Throughout her twenty-five-year career at the Opera, she successfully created numerous roles in pantomime ballets performed at the theater, including Le jugement de Paris, Oenone, Figaro, Suzanne, Telemachus, Eucharis, Hero and Leandre, Venus, The Marriage of Gamache, Quitterie, Lucas and Laurette, Nicole, The Loves of Antoinette and Cleo, Shepherd, and Octavie, each earning her widespread acclaim.