Auguste Anicet, later Auguste Anicet-Bourgeois (25 December 1806 – 12 January 1871) was a French dramatist.
He was born in Paris.
The first play to bear his name is L'Ami et le mari, ou le Nouvel Amphitryon, a vaudeville in one act.
It was produced in 1825, when the author was still in his teens.
Over the course of his career he was credited in the writing of nearly 200 plays, as many as ten a year.
However the nature of theatrical collaboration at this time was such that the extent of his contribution to any given play is debatable.
He is the subject of an anecdote in Dumas's "Comment je devins auteur dramatique" ("How I became a Dramatist"), published in 1833 in Revue des Deux Mondes.
One of his plays was adapted for the English stage as The Black Doctor (1846), a vehicle for Ira Aldridge.Very little is known of his life beyond a connection to the military.