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Cosette-and-marius
Won't you say? Will you tell?
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Brujon
Brujon
Biographical information
Gender

Male

Job

Thief
Henchmen of Patron-Minette (musical only)

Behind the scenes
Portrayer

Chris Holland
Phil Snowden
Adam Pearce
Bernard Fatacki

Brujon was a very cunning and very adroit young spark, with a bewildered and plaintive air. It was in consequence of this plaintive air that the magistrate had released him, thinking him more useful in the Charlemagne yard than in close confinement.

Brujon seemed to be stupefied by prison. He could sometimes be seen standing by the hour together in front of the sutler’s window in the Charlemagne yard, staring like an idiot at the sordid list of prices which began with: garlic, 62 centimes, and ended with: cigar, 5 centimes. Or he passed his time in trembling, chattering his teeth, saying that he had a fever, and inquiring whether one of the eight and twenty beds in the fever ward was vacant.

All at once, towards the end of February, 1832, it was discovered that Brujon, that somnolent fellow, had had three different commissions executed by the errand-men of the establishment, not under his own name, but in the name of three of his comrades; and they had cost him in all fifty sous, an exorbitant outlay which attracted the attention of the prison corporal.

Trivia[]

Brujon replaces Gueulemer in the musical  though not as one of the four heads of Patron-Minette but as one of Thenardier's henchmen of the same gang of criminals in which he now leads.

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