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Jean Christophe Averty

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Name
  
Jean-Christophe Averty


Role
  
Director

Jean-Christophe Averty Jean Christophe Averty Archives vido et radio Inafr

Movies
  
A Midsummer Night's Dream, Parade

Similar People
  
Alfred Jarry, Guy Grosso, Michel Modo, Jean Bouise, Christine Delaroche

Les secrets des trucages de Jean-Christophe Averty | Archive INA


Jean-Christophe Averty (6 August 1928 in Paris – 4 March 2017) was a French television and radio director, and Satrap of the College of 'Pataphysique.

Contents

Many of his television productions from the 1960s were early examples of French video art. His studies were used in the following decades by the research groups of the French National Audiovisual Institute (INA).

Jean-Christophe Averty Dcs de JeanChristophe Averty pionnier des arts tlvisuels

La television de jean christophe averty archive ina


Biography

Jean-Christophe Averty Le jazz au Balzac Le Trio HUM La camra de JeanChristophe

A graduate of the IDHEC film school, Averty started in television in 1952 at the then French Television Office. He has since directed over five hundred programs for television and radio, across all disciplines: fiction, documentary, drama, variety, and jazz. His many awards include an Emmy award in the United States.

Jean-Christophe Averty Dcs de JeanChristophe Averty figure incontournable de la tlvision

Averty was appointed Satrap of the College of 'Pataphysique in 1990, due to his fascination for Alfred Jarry and Pataphysique.

Jean-Christophe Averty JeanChristophe Averty pionnier de la tlvision est mort Tl Star

Averty made his reputation on his strong character, his taste for provocation and his sense for innovative television. His 1963 series The Green Grapes was infamous for a recurring sequence of a baby being put through a grater.

Jean-Christophe Averty Mort de JeanChristophe Averty adieu un grand crateur dimages

A keen connoisseur of jazz, Averty filmed the Jazz à Juan festival for many years. The pianist Martial Solal paid him a tribute in one of his compositions: Averty, c'est moi (Averty that's me).

Over 28 years, he hosted 1,805 episodes of his radio show "Les Cinglés du music-hall", based on his own collection of jazz and variety 78s that he had bought in flea markets around the world. The show was cancelled in 2006 under Jean-Paul Cluzel's chairmanship of Radio France. The French section of the shows was based on notebooks entrusted to him by André Cauzard, filled with daily details of pre-war jazz music events.

Averty directed television shows where he applied his singular style to showcase the greatest francophone singers such as Françoise Hardy, Yves Montand, Johnny Hallyday, Sylvie Vartan, Juliette Greco, Georges Brassens, Dalida, France Gall, Serge Gainsbourg, Gilbert Bécaud, Guy Marchand, Léo Ferré, Tino Rossi, and Jean Sablon.

In 1969 Averty directed the TV movie Le Songe d'une nuit d'été, starring Claude Jade, Christine Delaroche and Jean-Claude Drouot, and filmed entirely in bluescreen.

His television creations are landmarks in their use of video as a mode of artistic expression. Averty made great use of characters filmed against a blue screen, overlaid on a drawn background. Examples are Sapeur Camembert, based on the eponymous work of Georges Colomb, and a production of Edmond Rostand's classic play Chantecler.

Averty was one of the last salaried directors of the French Production Company. In 2012, he entrusted the management, conservation and safeguarding of the rights of all of his television and radio works to the French National Audiovisual Institute (INA); nearly a thousand television programs on jazz, sports, fashion, variety and the theater.

Awards and distinctions

  • 1965 Emmy Award
  • 1991 Legion of Honour
  • References

    Jean-Christophe Averty Wikipedia