Gérard Jarlot

Gérard Jarlot (1923–1966) was a French journalist, screenwriter and novelist, winner of the Prix Médicis in 1963.

Jarlot met Marguerite Duras[1] in 1957. She dedicated the novel Moderato cantabile to him. With her, he adapted the book and wrote the dialogues for Seven Days... Seven Nights directed by Peter Brook in 1959.

In 1960, he signed the Manifesto of the 121 entitled "Declaration on the Right to draft evasion in the Algerian War".

Work

Literature

Screenplays

gollark: There have been a bunch of instances of Google making it annoying or misleading to *actually* turn off location history on Android, for instance.
gollark: Okay? That doesn't actually mean Google aren't gathering data if you literally use their browser, OS and apps?
gollark: Do you just not care about privacy? All of those (I mean, except cloud storage) seem to be available in open source or more privacy-respecting forms which are *still* free.
gollark: <@209777632324091905> Firefox can do cross-browser syncing *too*, and the "just works" and "has all your data" thing means Google is also probably data-mining you to death.
gollark: What is WRONG™ with Brave Browser?

References

  1. "Le secret de Marguerite Duras". LExpress.fr. 1 October 2006. Retrieved 2019-07-09.
  2. Les Armes blanches on WorldCat
  3. Un mauvais lieu in Esprit
  4. Un chat qui aboie
  5. Films by Gérad Jarlot on Télérama
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