
Actor
Born December 31, 1928 in Paris, France
Maurice Sinet, known as Siné, is one of the leading figures of French satirical cartooning, renowned for his dark humor, fierce anticlericalism, and radical political commitments. His life was inextricably linked to a passion for drawing, jazz, and anti-colonial activism. Maurice Albert Sinet was born in Paris, in a working-class neighborhood in the east of the city, at the end of 1928, into a modest family. His father was an artistic blacksmith and his mother a grocer. He grew up between Belleville, Ménilmontant, Barbès, and Pigalle, which instilled in him from a very young age a critical perspective on social inequality. At fourteen, he entered the École Estienne, studying drawing and model making while earning a living at night as a singer in cabarets. His time in the military, often spent in solitary confinement, reinforced his rejection of the army, the state, and imposed discipline.

Jean-Jacques de Félice, The Passion For Justice
Self (archive footage)

Faut Savoir se Contenter de Beaucoup
Siné

Cavanna, jusqu'à l'ultime seconde j'écrirai
Self

Arrabal et les Garçons
Self

Manifesto of the 121
Self

Mammuth
Le viticulteur

Choron dernière
Self

Louise-Michel
M. Pinchon, le père de Michel

Groland
Bernard-Henri Siné

Droit de Réponse
Self

Apostrophes
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Cartoon circus
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Discorama
Self