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Jean Laborde (journalist)
French journalist and novelist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Jean Laborde (9 December 1918 – 30 January 2007) was a French journalist and writer.
He was born in Lyon on 9 December 1918.
He studied law at university before commencing his career as a journalist. At the request of Pierre Lazareff, Jean became the judicial reporter of the France Soir in 1945. As such, he covered several famous cases, among them the Victor Kravchenko case, the Marie Besnard case and the Gustave Dominici case. From 1964, he was the chief law correspondent of L'Aurore. He quit in 1978 as a result of conflict with the new owner, Le Figaro.
He wrote some twenty books, under his own name and pen names such as Jean Delion and Raf Vallet. Several of his books were adapted for the cinema. In addition, he co-wrote the screenplay of Peur sur la ville, directed by Henri Verneuil in 1975.
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Works
Books
- Amour, que de crimes (1954)
- Un homme à part entière (1961)
- L'Héritage de violence (1969) (winner of the Maison de la Presse Prize)
- Le Moindre Mal (1971)
- Heureux les corrompus (1974)
Theater
- Peur sur la ville, directed by Henri Verneuil in 1975
Movie adaptations
- Les Bonnes Causes (1960), directed by Christian-Jaque in 1963
- La Seconde Vérité, directed by Christian-Jaque in 1966
- Les Assassins de l'ordre (1956), directed by Marcel Carné in 1971
- Le Pacha directed by Georges Lautner in 1968
- Mort d'un pourri, also directed by Georges Lautner in 1977.
References
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