Laurence de Cambronne (born 1 May 1951, Casablanca, Morocco) is a French journalist, novelist and humanitarian.[1][2]

Laurence de Cambronne
Born
Laurence Claude Deshayes de Cambronne

(1951-05-01) 1 May 1951 (age 72)
Occupation(s)Journalist, novelist, humanitarian
Years active1972-2008
Spouses
  • Marc Gilbert
  • Fabien Roland-Lévy
ChildrenJérémy, Alexandre, Paul, Hadrien and Raphaël

Biography edit

Family and formation edit

Descendant of Arnouph Deshayes de Cambronne who owned the Château d'Orrouy and Paul Cottin on her father's side and Ernest Picard-Destelan and Joseph Thebaud on her mother's side, she is a niece of rear admiral, François Picard-Destelan, former president of the International Monetary Fund, Jacques de Larosière, admiral of the United States Navy, Leo Hewlett Thebaud and American philanthropist, Louis A. Thebaud.

She was inspired by the diaries kept by her mother, Marie Picard Destelan, during the Second World War, her succinct notes on her day's activities, her meetings with a married man based on her father, Claude de Cambronne, an aircraft manufacturer, co-founder of Bordeaux-Aéronautique, the aryanized company of Marcel Dassault (ex-Bloch) ; Raphael Alibert, who promulgated the first Law on the status of Jews of October 1940 and René Hardy, suspected of being instrumental in the arrest of Jean Moulin and General Charles Delestraint, to write Les petits agendss rouges, in 2004. Her sister, Beatrice de Cambronne, a stylist was married to the Belgo-Russian writer and scenarist André Couteaux, the father of Paul-Marie Coûteaux, french politician, and member of Reconquête, since 2022.

Laurence de Cambronne was married to the French journalist and television producer[3][4][5] Marc Gilbert from 1973 to 1982,[6] and to the journalist Fabien Roland-Lévy, from 1987 to 2003. In 1987, represented by the monarchist lawyer Raymond de Geouffre de la Pradelle and her notary Bruno Cheuvreux, she wins in appeal and inherits from her first husband, who committed suicide in 1982, from a will described as wishful thinking ("voeu pieux") and set a judicial precedent.[7]

She went to the Cours Hattemer and Sainte-Marie de Neuilly.

Career edit

For Paris Match, from 1972 to 1983, she writes about nude beaches,[8] alcoholism[9] and interviews Georges Dumézil for Le Point[10] in 1984, after joining ELLE magazine, in 1983.

She is editor in chief adjunct from 1993 to 2008,[11] and interviews for the magazine : Lionel Jospin, Jean-Pierre Chevènement, Édith Cresson, Georgina Dufoix, Michel Rocard or Françoise Fabius.[12] in charge of the pages Vie Privée, C’est mon histoire, Une journée avec, inspired by the last page of The Sunday Times Magazine, One day in the life of and the Elle à Paris section of the magazine.[13]

She also participated in 1996 in the launch of the French television channel Téva.[14]

In 2011, she withdraws from the "Literary Prize for Knowledge and research”, created by the novelist Laurence Biava to reward “literary texts on science”, the neo-nazi activist, Maxime Brunerie, known for having tried to kill the former President of the Republic Jacques Chirac on July 14, 2002, being part of the jury.[15]

In 2015, during the European migrant crisis, she joins associations, in Leros, as a volunteer, to help creating shelters for Syrian women and children, during their Immigration to Greece.[16][17] She is mentioned by Emmanuel Carrère in his book Yoga (2020).[18][19]

Our friend Laurence de Cambronne, who was a journalist before living in Patmos for half of the year, has returned to work for a report in Leros. She comes to dinner at the house, she tells, she gets excited. She speaks of the courage of migrants, of the indifference of some, of the dedication of others, of an American historian who left everything to do there, she says, a wonderful job. Listening to her, we are a little ashamed of our carelessness of being happy in the world, dressed in elegantly creased white linen and mainly busy choosing the day's beach according to the tavern and canopy. (Emmanuel Carrère, Yoga, Éditions Gallimard, october 2020)

Bibliography edit

Writer edit

  • Le Danger de naître : Entretiens avec Laurence de Cambronne, with Claude Sureau, Plon, 1993
  • Votre premier mois avec bébé : Les 100 questions que se pose une mère dans les jours qui suivent la naissance de son enfant, Robert Laffont, 1998[20]
  • Les petits agendas rouges, Plon, 2004
  • Les plus belles histoires d'amour de Elle : C'est mon histoire, with Antoine Silber, Robert Laffont, 2006

Collection manager edit

  • Gilles Verdiani, Mon métier de père, JC Lattès, 2012
  • Marta de Tena, La garde alternée, JC Lattès, 2012
  • Maryline Baumard, Vive la pension !, JC Lattès, 2012[21]
  • François Reynaert and Vincent Brocvielle, Le Kit du 21e siècle, JC Lattès, 2013
  • Anne Dufourmantelle and Laure Leter, Se trouver, JC Lattès, 2014

Biographies edit

Awards edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Les migrants ont bouleversé sa vie, 28 minutes, Arte
  2. ^ Laurence de Cambronne raconte son séjour auprès des migrants sur l'île de Leros, I Tele
  3. ^ Le Surmoi antisémite de la Télévision Française, Times of Israel
  4. ^ Radio Shalom, Times of Israel
  5. ^ Le Déni Riefenstahl, Times of Israel
  6. ^ Marc Gilbert, Site du judaisme alsacien
  7. ^ Dalloz, Jurisprudences, rep. civ. et Mise à jour, v.Testament, par Yvon Loussouarn et M.Vanel, n°44, p.151, 1987
  8. ^ La saison des apparences: Naissance des corps, de Christophe Granger, 2017 ; Sur les arrêtés en vigueur, Paris Match, 19 juillet 1975, p.7 ; L'Express, 4-10 août 1975, p.52-56
  9. ^ Éloge de l'ivresse, by Gabriel Domenech, 1981
  10. ^ From Nostradamus to Ubykh language dictionnaire : the universe of Georges Dumézil, in Le Point (Laurence Gilbert), March 19, 1984
  11. ^ Laurence de Cambronne, Livre de Poche
  12. ^ Biography of Laurence de Cambronne, Evene, Le Figaro
  13. ^ Laurence de Cambronne, 2 Seas Foreign Rights Catalog
  14. ^ Journal Quotidien of Joëlle Goron, Teva
  15. ^ Brunerie, invité encombrant d'un jury littéraire, Le Figaro
  16. ^ A Leros, rencontre entre des refugies et des volontaires du monde entier, ELLE
  17. ^ A Leros, un an avec les migrants, Le Monde
  18. ^ ""Un ego despotique" : l'ex-femme d'Emmanuel Carrère dénonce les "mensonges" de l'auteur de Yoga". LEFIGARO (in French). 30 September 2020. Retrieved 2021-03-28.
  19. ^ L'art de la bifurcation : dichotomie, mythomanie et uchronie dans l'oeuvre d'Emmanuel Carrère ( Télécharger le fichier original), Université du Québec à Montréal - Maîtrise en Etudes Littéraires 2007
  20. ^ Lui faire faire ses nuits, ELLE
  21. ^ La collection Laurence de Cambronne Archived 2015-04-11 at the Wayback Machine, Editions JC Lattès
  22. ^ Le carrefour de la culture, France Inter
  23. ^ «Madame de Staël», 24 jours dans la vie d’une femme, Vanity Fair
  24. ^ Des femmes en littérature: Karen Blixen, Madame de Staël et la comtesse Greffulhes, France Inter
  25. ^ Laurence de Cambronne in Au coeur de l'histoire, Europe1
  26. ^ Vivement Dimanche, Pure People
  27. ^ Vivement Dimanche // Charlotte de Turckheim (17/05/2015), Blog of Michel Drucker
  28. ^ Madame de Staël, la femme qui faisait trembler Napoléon, Le salon des lettres
  29. ^ Madame de Staël, La femme qui faisait trembler Napoléon, Laurence de Cambronne, Vivement Dimanche, France 2
  30. ^ ACDH - L'intégrale - Madame de Staël et Genève - 08/03/2017, Europe 1
  31. ^ Une classe de Saint-Luc en direct sur Europe 1 mercredi, La voix du nord
  32. ^ Carnet du jour, Le Figaro
  33. ^ Joude Jassouma : "Un jour j'ai vu un chien portant la tête décapitée d'un être humain. Là j'ai dit il faut partir", France Inter
  34. ^ Le salon des Femmes de Lettres 2015 et Prix Simone Veil, Evous
  35. ^ Prix Simone Veil, Femmes de lettres
  36. ^ Prix Simone Veil, Livres Hebdo

External links edit