Claude Autant-Lara was a French film director and later Member of the European Parliament (MEP). Born at Luzarches in Val-d'Oise, Autant-Lara was educated in France and at London's Mill Hill School during his mother's exile as a pacifist. Early in his career, he worked as an art director and costume designer, his best-known work in this vein was possibly for Nana (1926), a silent film directed by Jean Renoir. Autant-Lara also acted in the film. As a director, he frequently created provocative movies, saying "if a film does not have venom, it is worthless". In the 1960s, he turned his back on the New Wave movement, and from then on he had no popular successes. On 18 June 1989, he came to public notice again, controversially, when he was elected to the European Parliament as a member of the National Front and the oldest member of the assembly. In his maiden speech, in July 1989, he caused a scandal by expressing his "concerns about the American cultural threat", provoking a walkout by the majority of the deputies. In an interview granted to the monthly magazine Globe in September 1989, he accused ex-President of the European Parliament and Holocaust survivor Simone Veil of playing "ethnic politics" to try and "infiltrate and dominate", saying that "If they try to speak to me about genocide, I say they missed mother Veil!" He also described Nazi gas chambers as a "string of lies". The resulting scandal led to his resignation as European deputy. Moreover, the members of the Académie des Beaux-Arts, of which he was a vice-president for life, voted to prohibit him from taking his seat thenceforth. His memoir, The Rage in the Heart, appeared in 1984. He died at Antibes in Alpes-Maritimes in 2000. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Birthday: August 05, 1901
Death: February 05, 2000
December 06, 1961
October 19, 1951
February 06, 1946
October 09, 1953
September 22, 1947
November 09, 1943
December 01, 1923
June 15, 1939
April 29, 1968
November 10, 1937
September 17, 1958
October 26, 1956
October 29, 1959
October 26, 1958
December 29, 1955
March 25, 1966
October 29, 1954
November 22, 1969
January 20, 1954
December 16, 1949
October 29, 1938
August 22, 1963
September 05, 1961
April 04, 1961
August 06, 1942
December 23, 1942
April 07, 1967
March 27, 1952
August 13, 1960
December 01, 1939
April 28, 1965
April 12, 1965
January 03, 1928
January 01, 1925
November 10, 1933
September 14, 1977
April 20, 1960
December 12, 1924
January 11, 1963
June 25, 1926
March 03, 1928
June 30, 1931
June 03, 1932
October 24, 1929
December 30, 1932
December 03, 1920
October 07, 1922
June 04, 1920
September 30, 1980