Marie-Claire Pauwels

Marie-Claire Pauwels (3 September 1945, 15th arrondissement of Paris[1] – 22 May 2011) was a French journalist, the daughter of Suzanne Brégeon and Louis Pauwels. In April 1980, she launched the magazine Madame Figaro of which she became the first editor-in-chief and received the Prix Roger Nimier in 2003 for her autobiographical work Fille à papa.[1]

In 1975, she created the magazine Jacinte of which she became editor-in-chief until 1980. She then took over, under the authority of her father, the direction of the women sections of Le Figaro Magazine.

Bibliography

  • 1988: Mon chéri, Éditions Flammarion ISBN 978-2-0806-6042-8; 1989, J'ai lu, ISBN 978-2-2772-2599-7
  • 2002: Fille à papa, Albin Michel, ISBN 978-2-2261-3607-7 — Prix Roger Nimier (2003)
gollark: The vectorised implementation of firecubez is planned for 2024.
gollark: Vier-zee-ion.
gollark: This is also approximately why I'm against more globalized governance integration: having multiple somewhat independent nations/states/whatever means you can test out different plans in parallel without having to *explicitly* A/B test people, which they dislike.
gollark: I'm not sure if your premise applies in realistic cases.
gollark: Sure.

References


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