Laurence de Cambronne

Laurence de Cambronne
Born (1951-05-01) 1 May 1951
Casablanca, Morocco
Occupation Journalist, novelist

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

Biography

She works for Paris Match from 1972 to 1983 and ELLE magazine, from 1983 to 1993, before becoming editor in chief from 1993 to 2008,[1] She interviewed for the magazine : Lionel Jospin, Jean-Pierre Chevènement, Édith Cresson, Georgina Dufoix, Michel Rocard or Françoise Fabius.[2] 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.[3] She also participated in 1996 in the launch of the French television channel Téva.[4] 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.[5]

Bibliography

as a writer
as a collection manager

Prize

Personal life

She is a descendant of Arnouph Deshayes de Cambronne and Paul Cottin on her father's side and of Ernest Picard-Destelan and Joseph Thebaud on her mother's side. She is a niece of rear admiral, François Picard-Destelan and former president of the International Monetary Fund, Jacques de Larosière.

Her father is Claude de Cambronne, an aircraft manufacturer, co-founder of Bordeaux-Aéronautique and her sister, Beatrice de Cambronne, a stylist married to the Franco-Russian writer André Couteaux.

Laurence de Cambronne was married to the French journalist and television producer[19] Marc Gilbert from 1973 to 1982,[20] to the journalist Fabien Roland-Lévy, from 1987 to 2003 and to the writer Antoine Silber since then.

See also

Notes

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, April 30, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.