Gabriel Garran Explained
Gabriel Garran (pseudonym of Gabriel Gersztenkorn; 3 May 1929 – 6 May 2022)[1] was a French actor and theatre director.
Biography
Born to a French Jewish family of Polish origins in Paris, he fled persecution in Vichy France at the age of 11. After World War II, he became an actor and in 1965 founded the 'Théâtre de la Commune' in Aubervilliers, the first permanent theater in French suburbs.[2] [3] He managed that theater in the years 1960–1984 and staged numerous plays in it. At the end of the 1970s, Garran founded the Théâtre International de Langue Française (TILF) which focused on presenting plays from African French-speaking countries.[4]
Cinema
Assistant director
Director
- 1983: Brûler les planches
Books
- Le Rire Du Fou. Paris: C. Bourgois, 1976.
- Géographie française. Paris: Flammarion, 2014.
- Filiation. Paris: Riveneuve. 2017.
External links
Notes and References
- https://www.lemonde.fr/disparitions/article/2022/05/07/gabriel-garran-fondateur-du-theatre-de-la-commune-d-aubervilliers-est-mort-a-l-age-de-95-ans_6125166_3382.html Gabriel Garran, fondateur du Théâtre de la Commune d’Aubervilliers, est mort à l’âge de 95 ans
- Guiat, Cyrille. The French and Italian communist parties: Comrades and culture, pp. 105-111. Psychology Press, 2003.
- [David Bradby|Bradby, David]
- [François Paré|Paré, François]