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Roger Grenier

Roger Grenier

Writing

September 19, 1919 – November 8, 2017 (died at 98)
Caen, Calvados, France
Male
6 Movies
3 TV Shows

Roger Grenier (19 September 1919 – 8 November 2017) was a French writer, journalist and radio animator. He was Regent of the Collège de ’Pataphysique. As a youth, Grenier lived in Pau, where Andrélie opened a shop selling glasses. During the Second World War, he attended classes taught by Gaston Bachelard at the Sorbonne while participating in the French Resistance before actively participating in the 1944 liberation of Paris. In his memoir Paris ma grand'ville, Grenier describes being briefly arrested and narrowly avoiding execution by the Occupation forces on the boulevard Saint-Germain. He was only able to escape after an argument in German broke out among his captors. After the Liberation of Paris, he joined Albert Camus at the newspaper Combat. Grenier later went on to write for the newspaper France Soir. As a journalist, he followed post-war trials which inspired his first essay in 1949 Le Rôle d'accusé. He left professional journalism in 1964 to assume a position on the editorial board of the prominent French publishing house Gallimard. A true man of letters, Grenier was actively involved in many aspects of literary production and criticism. In addition to working as a radio host and a writer for television and cinema, he was a member of the board at Gallimard from 1964 up until his death. Young authors frequently sought out his advice and submitted manuscripts to him for consideration. Grenier was well connected among French authors of his time, such as Joseph Kessel and Albert Camus (whose works Grenier edited after Camus died in 1960), and writers abroad, such as William Faulkner and Yukio Mishimo. His own writing has been recognized by some of the most prominent literary institutions in France. He is recipient of the Grand prix de l'Académie française in 1985 for his body of work of more than thirty works: novels including the best-sellers Le Palais d'hiver 1965 and Ciné-roman Prix Femina in 1972, as well as essays on Chekov and F. Scott Fitzgerald and memoirs. He is best known in the United States for his work The Difficulty of Being a Dog (Les larmes d'Ulysse), translated by Alice Kaplan. Until his death, he was writing and a busy conference attendee, speaking about his works, literature, Gallimard, or his friends: Albert Camus, and Brassaï. Source: Article "Roger Grenier" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.

Elective Affinities
Elective Affinities

Elective Affinities

1983 5.7

Screenplay

Age 63 (now 98)
Nul n'est parfait
Nul n'est parfait

Nul n'est parfait

1974 7.5

Writer

Age 55 (now 98)
The Summer People
TS

The Summer People

1974 9.0

Screenplay

Age 55 (now 98)
De Grey, un Récit romanesque
De Grey, un Récit romanesque

De Grey, un Récit romanesque

1976 9.0

Writer

Age 56 (now 98)
Henry James Stories
HJ

Henry James Stories

1976 8.0

Writer

Age 56 (now 98)
2 eps
Amour de vivre
Amour de vivre

Amour de vivre

2010 5.5

as Self - Journalist

Age 90 (now 98)
Sartre/Camus: A Fractured Friendship
Sartre/Camus: A Fractured Friendship

Sartre/Camus: A Fractured Friendship

2014

as Self

Age 94 (now 98)
Apostrophes
Apostrophes

Apostrophes

1975 8.5

as Self

Age 55 (now 98)
3 eps
30 millions d'amis
30 millions d'amis

30 millions d'amis

1976 6.2

as Self

Age 56 (now 98)
1 ep