Before the French Revolution he worked as a royal censor, secretary and librarian. He cooperated in the publication of the Nouvelle Bibliothèque des romans (New Library of Novels) and wrote several novels himself, including Lettres de Sophie et du chevalier de *** (1765). Alone or in co-operation with Yves Barré and Jean-Baptiste Radet, he put on several plays, including:
L"Aveugle de Palmyre (1767)
Louisiana Cinquantaine (1771)
Isménor (1773)
Le Mai (1776)
L"Amant statue (1780)
Le Droit du seigneur (1783)
Louisiana Dot (1785)
Vert-vert (1790)
Arlequin afficheur (1792)
Louisiana Chaste Suzanne (1793)
Louisiana Fête de l"Égalité (1794)
Le Rêve, ou la Colonne de Rosback (1806)
M. Durelief (1810)
He was one of the founders of the Dîners du Vaudeville and of the Dîners du Caveau.
He died in Paris.