Léon Zitrone

Léon Zitrone (25 November 1914 25 November 1995) was a Russian-born French journalist and television presenter.

Léon Zitrone
Léon Zitrone (left)
Born(1914-11-25)25 November 1914
Died25 November 1995(1995-11-25) (aged 81)
NationalityFrench
EducationÉcole supérieure de journalisme de Paris
OccupationTelevision journalist

Biography

Zitrone was born in Petrograd, Russia. He arrived in France with his family fleeing communism at the age of six. He graduated from the ESJ Paris. He began by training in scientific studies but his mastership of Russian, French, English and German gave him entrance in 1948 to the radio foreign broadcasting services of Radiodiffusion-Télévision Française (RTF). In 1959, he joined the television activity of RTF. From 1961, he became news presenter, function he occupied for nearly 20 years, first until 1975, on the first French television channel (now TF1), then also on Antenne 2, the other public service channel. Jean-Pierre Elkabbach called him back in 1979. He then took charge of the news program during the week-end (his contract was established until 1 February 1981). He would come back for those news programs also during the Easter and Pentecost week-ends.

But Léon Zitrone's celebrity is due to the programs he presented or co-presented. He was host of the televised program Intervilles (French counterpart of England's It's a Knockout) with Guy Lux. He commented 6 times the Tour de France, and he is remembered for his prodigious memory for names of riders. He presented the Olympics for 8 times, commented the Eurovision Song Contest on 4 occasions and presented 16 Bastille Day military parades. Above all, he was the key-commenter for big events, such as weddings, burials or investitures of world's key figures, some thirty of them during the course of his career.[2]

In 1978, following French singer Marie Myriam's victory the previous year, the Eurovision song contest took place in Paris. Léon Zitrone co-presented with Denise Fabre and made the presentation in English.[3]

In 1984, Zitrone took a leading role in the movie American Dreamer.

Death

He died on his 81st birthday, 25 November 1995, at the Val-de-Grâce hospital in Paris.[1]

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1959Rue des prairiesHimself / En personne
1961Leon Garros ishchet drugaLéon Garros
1961Three Faces of SinEn personne / Himself
1961The PresidentHimselfUncredited
1961CocagneHimself
1962Le Gentleman d'EpsomEn personne / HimselfUncredited
1962Portrait-robotHimself
1963Le coup de bambou
1963Méfiez-vous, mesdamesHimself
1964Dandelions by the RootsHimself / La voix commentaire du tiercéVoice, Uncredited
1965Train d'enferHimself
1966Le caïd de ChampignolHimself
1966Un garçon, une fille. Le dix-septième cielHimselfVoice, Uncredited
1967Live for LifeLe présentateur télé
1968PashaHimself / En personne (commentateur hippique)Uncredited
1968Ho!Himself / En personneUncredited
1969Les gros malins
1969Trois hommes sur un chevalUn turfisteUncredited
1971MacédoineZitroneUncredited
1972Les intrusLe journaliste
1974MariageLui-même
1975Bons Baisers de Hong KongEspion français
1976L'Année sainteRécitant TVVoice, Uncredited
1977Drôles de zèbresLe commentateur hippique
1978Et vive la liberté!Himself
1980The Umbrella CoupLe commentateur de la soiréeVoice
1980La BoumHimself
1982Deux heures moins le quart avant Jésus-Christ
1983Les Mots pour le direLe présentateur émission TVUncredited
1984American DreamerIvan Stranauvlitch
1985Le mariage du sièclecommentateurVoice, (final film role)
gollark: Why *would* they?
gollark: Can you *smoke* it?
gollark: > people need to learn the law of consecration> all things have a purpose???
gollark: One thing I'm annoyed by is people saying stuff like "processed foods are bad". I mean, what does that actually *mean*? What "processing" is bad?
gollark: That just looks weird and accursed.

References

  1. Profile, lefigaro.fr, 17 October 2012; accessed 24 August 2015.
  2. « École de journalisme de Paris » Archived 2014-09-11 at the Wayback Machine
  3. Histoire de l'ESJ Paris Archived 2014-06-06 at Archive.today

See also

Preceded by
Angela Rippon
Eurovision Song Contest presenter
(with Denise Fabre)
1978
Succeeded by
Daniel Pe'er and Yardena Arazi
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