Angelique lanzmann nee en 1950
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- Identifier
- irn
- Language of Description
- English
- Alt. Identifiers
- Dates
- 1 Jan - 31 Dec
- Level of Description
- Item
- Languages
- Source
- EHRI Partner
- Eda Lichtman (Subject)
- Corinna Coulmas (Assistant)
- Claude Lanzmann (Director)
- William Lubtchansky (Cinematographer)
- Claude Lanzmann
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Claude Lanzmann, director of Shoah, dies at age 92
French director Claude Lanzmann, whose 9½-hour masterpiece Shoah bore unflinching witness to the Holocaust through the testimonies of Jewish victims, German executioners and Polish bystanders, has died at the age of
Gallimard, the publishing house for Lanzmanns autobiography, said he died Thursday morning in Paris. It gave no further details.
The power of Shoah, filmed in the s during Lanzmanns trips to the barren Polish landscapes where the slaughter of Jews was planned and executed, was in viewing the Holocaust as an event in the present, rather than as history. It contained no archival footage, no musical score — just the landscape, trains and recounted memories.
Lanzmann was 59 when the movie, his second, came out in It defined the Holocaust for those who saw it, and defined him as a filmmaker.
I knew that the subject of the film would be death itself. Death rather than survival, Lanzmann wrote in the autobiography. For 12 years I tried to stare relentlessly into the black sun of the Shoah.
Claude Lanzmanns cinematic work left an indelible mark on the collective memory, and shaped the consciousness of the Holocaust of viewers around the world, in these and other generation
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- Identifier
- irn
- Language of Description
- English
- Alt. Identifiers
- Dates
- 1 Jan - 31 Dec
- Level of Description
- Item
- Languages
- Source
- EHRI Partner
- Francine Kaufmann (Interpreter)
- Claude Lanzmann (Director)
- Claude Lanzmann
Claude Lanzmann was born in Paris to a Jewish family that immigrated to France from Eastern Europe. He attended the Lycée Blaise-Pascal in Clermont-Ferrand. His family went into hiding during World War II. He joined the French resistance at the age of 18 and fought in the Auvergne. Lanzmann opposed the French war in Algeria and signed a antiwar petition. From to he lived with Simone de Beauvoir. In he married French actress Judith Magre. Later, he married Angelika Schrobsdorff, a German-Jewish writer, and then Dominique Petithory in He is the father of Angélique Lanzmann, born in , and Félix Lanzmann (). Lanzmann's most renowned work, Shoah, is widely regarded as the seminal film on the subject of the Holocaust. He began interviewing survivors, historians, witnesses, and perpetrators in and finished editing the film in In , Lanzmann published his memoirs under the title "Le lièvre de Patagonie" (The Patagonian Hare). He was chief editor of the journal "Les Temps Modernes," which was founded by Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir,