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.
36, le grand tournant
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Le Loup blanc
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Fort Saganne
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De l'internationale à la marseillaise
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De l'internationale à la marseillaise
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Apocalypse: The Second World War
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Le Loup blanc
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L'Algérie des chimères
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Apocalypse: The Second World War
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Les Grandes batailles du passé
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The Alsatians or the two Mathilde
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