Roland Laudenbach

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Roland Laudenbach
Born(1921-10-20)20 October 1921
Paris, France
Died8 January 1991(1991-01-08) (aged 69)
Paris, France
NationalityFrench
OccupationWriter

Roland Laudenbach (20 October 1921 – 8 January 1991) was a French writer, editor, journalist, literary critic and scenarist.

Career

In 1944, Roland Laudenbach and Jean Cocteau founded Les éditions de La Table ronde (Round Table Publishing), a publishing enterprise that published works by many members of Les Hussards. Table ronde published several of Michel Déon's novels, including Les Gens de la Nuit, La Carotte et le Bâton, and Tout L'Amour du Monde II.

The journal Accent grave (revue de l'Occident) was launched in 1963 and ran to less than a dozen issues. It included Paul Sérant, Pierre Andreu, Michel Déon, Roland Laudenbach and Philippe Héduy on its board. The journal followed the ideas of Charles Maurras and had the theme of the crisis of western civilization.[1]

Cinematography

Year Film Contribution
1952 La Minute de vérité Writer with Jean Delannoy, Henri Jeanson and Robert Thoeren
1952 Le Voyage en Amérique Writer with Henri Lavorel
1954 Obsession Writer with Jean Delannoy, Antoine Blondin and Gian Luigi Rondi
1955 Bad Liaisons Screenplay with Alexandre Astruc
1958 Thérèse Étienne Producer
1958 Le insaziabili Writer with Léo Joannon
1958 One Life Screenplay with Alexandre Astruc
1962 Sentimental Education Screenplay with Roger Nimier, Alain Astruc

Notes

  1. ^ Morel 2010, p. 247.

Sources

  • Morel, Ludovic (2010-06-03), "Thierry Maulnier, soldat maurrassien de l'humanisme", Le Maurrassisme et la culture: L'action française, culture, société, politique (III) (in French), Presses Univ. Septentrion, ISBN 978-2-7574-0147-7, retrieved 2017-07-20

External link