1990 in France
| |||||
Decades: |
| ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
See also: | Other events of 1990 History of France • Timeline • Years |
Events from the year 1990 in France.
Incumbents
Events
- 15 May – Launch of the Renault Clio supermini, which will eventually replace the Renault 5.[1]
- 13 July – Loi Gayssot enacted, prohibiting Holocaust denial.
- 14 July – Jean-Michel Jarre performs Paris La Défense – Une Ville En Concert before a world record audience of 2.5 million people.[2]
- December – Espace Euro Disney, an information hub on the under construction Euro Disney resort near Paris, is opened to the public.[3]
- 1 December – Channel Tunnel workers from the United Kingdom and France meet 40 metres beneath the English Channel seabed.
Arts and literature
Sport
- 30 June – Tour de France begins.
- 8 July – French Grand Prix won by Alain Prost.
- 22 July – Tour de France ends, won by Greg LeMond of the United States.
Births
- 10 January – Richard Philippe, motor racing driver.
- 22 January – Alizé Cornet, tennis player.
- 15 February – Charles Pic, motor racing driver.
- 20 May – Adeline Canac, pair skater.
- 4 June – Tippi Degré, animal handler.
- 12 June — Jérôme Jarre, vine star.
- 21 October – Maxime Vachier-Lagrave, chess grandmaster.
- 22 December – Jean-Baptiste Maunier, actor and singer.
Deaths
January to March
- 10 January – Juliet Berto, actress (b. 1947).
- 16 January – Robert Lamartine, soccer player (b. 1935).
- 17 January – Charles Hernu, politician and Minister (b. 1923).
- 5 February – Père Marie-Benoît, friar who helped smuggle Jews to safety from Nazi-occupied Southern France (b. 1895).
- 5 February – Joseph Mauclair, cyclist (b. 1906).
- 15 February – Michel Drach, film director, writer, producer and actor (b. 1930).
- 7 March – Claude Arrieu, composer (b. 1903).
- 12 March – Philippe Soupault, poet, novelist, critic and political activist (b. 1897).
- 17 March – Capucine, actress (b. 1928).
- 20 March – Maurice Cloche, film director, screenwriter and film producer (b. 1907).
April to June
- 21 April – Romain de Tirtoff, artist and designer (b. 1892).
- 30 June – Jacques Lob, comic book creator (b. 1932).
July to September
- 18 July – Yves Chaland, cartoonist (b. 1957).
- 23 July – Pierre Gandon, illustrator and engraver of postage stamps (b. 1899).
- 25 July – Jean Fourastié, economist (b. 1907).
- 1 August – Michel Arnaud, General (b. 1915).
- 6 August – Jacques Soustelle, anthropologist (b. 1912).
- 15 August – Louis Vola, double bass player (b. 1902).
- 20 August – Maurice Gendron, cellist and teacher (b. 1920).
- 30 September – Michel Leiris, surrealist writer and ethnographer (b. 1901).
October to December
- 20 October – Colette Audry, novelist, screenwriter and critic (b. 1906).
- 22 October – Louis Althusser, Marxist philosopher (b. 1918).
- 27 October – Jacques Demy, film director (b. 1931).
- October – Alfred Sauvy, demographer, anthropologist and historian (b. 1898).
- 5 November – Raymond Oliver, chef and restaurateur (b. 1909).
- 17 November – Pierre Braunberger, producer and actor (b. 1905).
- 1 December – Simone Melchior, wife and business partner of Jacques-Yves Cousteau (b. 1919).
- 18 December – Paul Tortelier, cellist and composer (b. 1914).
- 19 December – Edmond Delfour, international soccer player, manager (b. 1907).
- 23 December – Serge Danot, animator (b. 1931).
- 23 December – Pierre Gripari, writer (b. 1925).
Full date unknown
- Jacques-Laurent Bost, journalist (b. 1916).
- Daniel du Janerand, painter (b. 1919).
- Marcel Légaut, philosopher and mathematician (b. 1900).
- Claude Ponsard, economist (b. 1927).
gollark: Hmm, or maybe I could activate the backdoor I embedded in CraftOS, that could be fun too.
gollark: I should temporarily relicense potatOS under the AGPL on April Fools Day.
gollark: Also, if you have dynamically linked code it might not *actually* hold up in court to complain about stuff not being GPLed.
gollark: I mean, they *use* them, sure, but that's not *linking* in the narrowly defined sense.
gollark: How do CC programs link any CC APIs?
See also
References
- Forman, Edward (2010). Historical Dictionary of French Theater. Plymouth: Scarecrow Press. p. 139. ISBN 9780810849396. OCLC 705622337.
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 14 January 2010. Retrieved 15 October 2010.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.