Michel Droit
0.1Acting

Michel Droit

Jan 23, 1923 - Vincennes, Seine [now Val-de-Marne], France

Michel Droit (23 January 1923 in Vincennes, Val-de-Marne – 22 June 2000) was a French novelist and journalist. He was the father of the photographer Éric Droit (1954–2007).

After studying at the Faculté des lettres de Paris and Sciences Po, Droit joined the army in 1944 and was wounded near Ulm in April 1945. He took on a career as a press, radio and television journalist after the Second World War and at the 1960s he was the preferred television interviewer of général de Gaulle.

His first novel, Plus rien au monde, dates to 1954. In 1964, he won the Grand prix du roman de l'Académie française for his novel The Return (Le Retour). On 6 March 1980, on the same day as Marguerite Yourcenar, he was elected as a member of the Académie française, replacing Joseph Kessel.

Droit wrote a polemic against a reggae adaptation of La Marseillaise as Aux armes et cætera by Serge Gainsbourg, reproaching him for "provoking" a resurgence of anti-Semitism and thus making things difficult for his "co-religionists". Droit was attacked for this position by the Mouvement contre le racisme et pour l'amitié entre les peuples.

Droit got into legal difficulties as a member of the CNCL, a television regulator set up in the 1980s, but this was thrown out of court with the help of his lawyer Jean-Marc Varaut.

Droit accidentally killed one of his companions on a safari in Africa.

Droit is buried in the Passy Cemetery.

Source: Article "Michel Droit" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.

Credits

Cast

Media
Movie1972Flash LoveMichel Droit
Movie2020Entretien politique : Histoire et mode d'emploiSelf (archive footage)
Movie2012De Gaulle, le géant aux pieds d'argileSelf (archive footage)
Movie2017De Gaulle, the Last King of FranceSelf (archive footage)
Movie2019Un peu, beaucoup, passionnément... Les Présidents et les FrançaisSelf (archive footage)
TV Show1975ApostrophesSelf5

Crew

No crew credits available.