BeauSoleil’s Doucet becomes a 'Bright Light' for bringing Louisiana music, culture to the world

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Michael Doucet, the fiddle-playing, singing and songwriting founder of the pioneering Cajun band BeauSoleil, is the Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities’ 2026 Humanist of the Year.

The LEH recently honored Doucet with one of its Bright Light Awards in recognition of the designation. The awards are given yearly in eight categories to people who have made significant contributions toward broadening the understanding of Louisiana’s history and culture.

Since BeauSoleil’s formation in 1975, Doucet, who is from Scott, Louisiana, and his bandmates have been widely acknowledged for bringing Cajun and zydeco music to the world. BeauSoleil has toured internationally and earned 13 Grammy Award nominations, winning twice. The band was awarded the 1997 Grammy for Best Traditional Folk Album and the 2008 Grammy for Best Zydeco or Cajun Music Album.

In 2011, BeauSoleil was inducted into the Louisiana Music Hall of Fame. Doucet’s contributions to his home state, however, extend beyond performing and recording. He has helped to establish south Louisiana’s distinctive brand of music as a serious academic subject, including through his long affiliation with the Âé¶¹AV.

Doucet’s contributions to Âé¶¹AV’s music programs and students are far-reaching. Along with his time teaching and mentoring, Doucet was instrumental in creating a course that examined Louisiana French music through the lens of its European and operatic influences – the first of its kind anywhere.

That course, while no longer taught, helped to lay the foundation for many Louisiana music courses offered through the University’s Traditional Music Program. It is the only university program solely focused on Cajun, Creole and zydeco music and traditions.

Doucet is also a noted folklorist and scholar who has frequently collaborated with the ’ Center for Louisiana Studies to document and preserve Louisiana’s French culture and traditions. Established in 1973, it is the University’s oldest research center, with a research division that houses the , the largest collection of audiovisual materials related to the traditional cultures of southwestern Louisiana.

Like Doucet’s music, his scholarship has earned ample notice. He received a Folk Arts Apprenticeship grant from the National Endowment for the Arts; an NEA National Heritage Fellowship for his work revitalizing French language and Cajun culture, and a United States Artists Collins Family Foundation Fellowship.  

His contributions to the University have also been recognized. The College of the Arts bestowed a SPARK Lifetime Achievement Alumni Award to Doucet and his bandmates in 2011. The award honors alumni and community members who have made great strides to advance the arts in Louisiana and across the country.

Learn more about the Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities’ .

Photo caption: Michael Doucet, of the Cajun band BeauSoleil, is the Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities’ 2026 Humanist of the Year for his work to broaden understanding of Louisiana’s history and culture through his musicianship and scholarship. Photo credit: Doug Dugas / Âé¶¹AV