
Writing
Born November 19, 1921 in Tours, Indre-et-Loire, France
Henri de Turenne (19 November 1921 – 23 August 2016) is a French journalist and screenwriter. He was born in Tours. The son of Armand de Turenne, a World War I flying ace, he was raised in Germany and French Algeria, both countries becoming central creative themes in his adult work. After the Second World War, de Turenne worked as a journalist for Agence France-Presse, Le Figaro, France Soir, and ORTF, reporting from Allied-occupied Germany, covering the Korean War and the Algerian War, and, in 1952, winning the Prix Albert Londres. Since the mid-1960s, he worked primarily in television, notably on the French Grandes Batailles series for Pathé, making over a hundred documentaries. He won an Emmy in 1982 for a documentary on the Vietnam War. His fictional works include Les Alsaciens ou les deux Mathilde (1996), made for Arte, for which he shared a 7 d'Or with Michel Deutsch. Source: Article "Henri de Turenne (writer)" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.

Apocalypse: The Second World War

L'Algérie des chimères

The Alsatians or the two Mathilde

Fear City: A Family-Style Comedy
Narrator of the tissu documentary (voice)

Fort Saganne

Le Loup blanc

Les Grandes batailles du passé
Self

36, le grand tournant

The Sixth Side of the Pentagon
Narrator (voice)

Les Grandes Batailles
Henri de Turenne

Cinépanorama
Self