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{{short description|French film director and writer}}
{{short description|French film director and writer}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2013}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2023}}
{{Expand French|date=November 2010|Régine Deforges}}
{{Expand French|topic=bio|date=November 2010|Régine Deforges}}


{{ infobox person
{{ infobox person
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| birth_place = [[Montmorillon]], France
| birth_place = [[Montmorillon]], France
| death_date = {{death date and age|2014|4|3|1935|8|15|df=yes}}
| death_date = {{death date and age|2014|4|3|1935|8|15|df=yes}}
| death_place = [[Paris]], France
| death_place = Paris, France
| occupation = Writer
| occupation = Writer
| known for = ''La Bicyclette bleue''}}
| known for = ''La Bicyclette bleue''}}


'''Régine Deforges''' (15 August 1935 – 3 April 2014) was a French author, editor, director, and playwright.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.lemonde.fr/disparitions/article/2014/04/03/regine-deforges-l-auteure-de-la-bicyclette-bleue-est-morte_4395548_3382.html|title=Mort de Régine Deforges, l'auteure de " La Bicyclette bleue|publisher=Lemonde.fr|accessdate=4 April 2014|newspaper=Le Monde.fr|date=2014-04-03|last1=Savigneau|first1=Josyane}}</ref> Her book was the most popular book in France in 2000 and it was known by some to be offensive and to others for its plagiarism. Neither of which was proved.
'''Régine Deforges''' (15 August 1935 – 3 April 2014) was a French author, editor, director, and playwright.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.lemonde.fr/disparitions/article/2014/04/03/regine-deforges-l-auteure-de-la-bicyclette-bleue-est-morte_4395548_3382.html|title=Mort de Régine Deforges, l'auteure de " La Bicyclette bleue|work=Le Monde|access-date=4 April 2014|date=2014-04-03|last1=Savigneau|first1=Josyane}}</ref> Her book ''La Bicyclette bleue'' was the most popular book in France in 2000 and it was known by some to be offensive and to others for its plagiarism, neither of which was proved.


== Life ==
== Life ==
Deforges was born in [[Montmorillon]], [[Vienne]], Deforges is sometimes called the ''High Priestess of French [[erotic literature]]''. Deforges was the first woman to own and operate a [[publishing]] house in France. Over the years, she has been censored, prosecuted, and heavily fined for publishing "offensive" literature ([[Louis Aragon]]: ''[[Irene's Cunt (Le Con d'Irène)|Irene's Cunt]]''). {{citation needed|date=April 2014}}
Deforges was born in [[Montmorillon]], [[Vienne (department)|Vienne]], Deforges is sometimes called the ''High Priestess of French [[erotic literature]]''. Deforges was the first woman to own and operate a [[publishing]] house in France.<ref>Theodore Zeldin, ''The French'' (NY: HarperCollins, 1983), 147. {{ISBN|9780006540731}}</ref> Over the years, she has been censored, prosecuted, and heavily fined for publishing "offensive" literature, beginning with [[Louis Aragon]]: ''[[Irene's Cunt (Le Con d'Irène)|Irene's Cunt]]''.<ref>{{cite web|author=Pierre Perrone|title=Régine Marie Deforges|website=The Independent|date=28 April 2014|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/r-gine-marie-deforges-erotic-writer-who-fell-foul-of-the-authorities-and-became-the-first-woman-to-9297228.html}}</ref>


One of her novels, ''[[La Bicyclette bleue]]'' (''The Blue Bicycle''), published in 1981, was France's biggest bestseller. In 2000, it was made into a television series. A story of love, obsession, and survival set during the turmoil of [[World War II]], it developed into a successful series of seven books.<ref name="phdn">{{cite web|url=http://www.phdn.org/antisem/antision/shamirdeforges.html|title=Lettre à Régine Deforges (sur Israel Shamir)|publisher=phdn.org|accessdate=6 October 2014}}</ref><ref name="google">{{cite book|title=La tentation antisémite|author=WIEVIORKA, M.|date=2012|publisher=ROBERT LAFFONT/BOUQUINS/SEGHER|isbn=9782221136140|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ykb2mOQkOeYC|accessdate=6 October 2014}}</ref> ''[[La Bicyclette bleue]]'' (''The Blue Bicycle'') would go on to cause a major international intellectual property court case. In the initial ruling, Deforges was found guilty of plagiarizing [[Margaret Mitchell|Margaret Mitchell's]] famous novel [[Gone with the Wind (novel)|Gone with the Wind]]. Deforges freely admitted that the first 70 pages were inspired by Mitchell's novel but the whole book was 1200 pages long.<ref>{{Cite news | url=https://www.nytimes.com/1989/12/07/books/court-finds-french-author-plagiarized-gone-with-wind.html | title=Court Finds French Author Plagiarized 'Gone with Wind'| newspaper=The New York Times| date=1989-12-07| last1=Riding| first1=Alan| last2=Times| first2=Special To the New York}}</ref> She won her case on appeal, and the ruling ordering her to pay damages was reversed.<ref>{{Cite news | url=https://www.nytimes.com/1990/11/22/books/an-author-is-cleared-of-plagiarism-charges.html | title=An Author is Cleared of Plagiarism Charges| newspaper=The New York Times| date=1990-11-22}}</ref> She was formerly president of the [[Société des Gens de Lettres de France]] and a member of the [[Prix Femina]] jury. She lived in [[Paris, France|Paris]].
One of her novels, {{ill|La Bicyclette bleue|fr|italic=yes}} (''The Blue Bicycle''), published in 1981, was France's biggest bestseller. In 2000, it was made into a television series. A story of love, obsession, and survival set during the turmoil of [[World War II]], it developed into a successful series of seven books.<ref name="phdn">{{cite web|url=http://www.phdn.org/antisem/antision/shamirdeforges.html|title=Lettre à Régine Deforges (sur Israel Shamir)|publisher=phdn.org|access-date=6 October 2014}}</ref><ref name="google">{{cite book|title=La tentation antisémite|author=WIEVIORKA, M.|date=2012|publisher=ROBERT LAFFONT/BOUQUINS/SEGHER|isbn=9782221136140|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ykb2mOQkOeYC|access-date=6 October 2014}}</ref> ''La Bicyclette bleue'' would go on to cause a major international intellectual property court case. In the initial ruling, Deforges was found guilty of plagiarizing [[Margaret Mitchell|Margaret Mitchell's]] famous novel [[Gone with the Wind (novel)|Gone with the Wind]]. Deforges freely admitted that the first 70 pages were inspired by Mitchell's novel but the whole book was 1200 pages long.<ref>{{Cite news | url=https://www.nytimes.com/1989/12/07/books/court-finds-french-author-plagiarized-gone-with-wind.html | title=Court Finds French Author Plagiarized 'Gone with Wind'| newspaper=The New York Times| date=1989-12-07| last1=Riding| first1=Alan| last2=Times| first2=Special To the New York}}</ref> She won her case on appeal, and the ruling ordering her to pay damages was reversed.<ref>{{Cite news | url=https://www.nytimes.com/1990/11/22/books/an-author-is-cleared-of-plagiarism-charges.html | title=An Author is Cleared of Plagiarism Charges| newspaper=The New York Times| date=1990-11-22}}</ref> She was formerly president of the [[Société des Gens de Lettres de France]] and a member of the [[Prix Femina]] jury. She lived in Paris.


Deforges transformed her home town into a "City of Writing". It has had museums and bookshops with that theme since 2000.<ref name=saulge>{{Cite web|url=https://www.saulge.com/montmorillon|title=Montmorillon: one of Vienne's prettiest historical cities {{!}} Saulgé.com|website=www.saulge.com|access-date=2019-09-12}}</ref> The idea that Montmorillon should be a [[Book town]] came from Deforges who was then a local councillor. The town had a history of paper-making and her idea received both local and international support. The old medieval quarter of the town attracted six million euros of funding and now brands itself as a book town.<ref name="Johnson2018">{{cite book|author=Alex Johnson|title=Book Towns|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YN9aDwAAQBAJ|date=5 April 2018|publisher=Frances Lincoln (White Lion 2)|isbn=978-1-78101-242-0}}</ref>
Deforges transformed her home town into a "City of Writing". It has had museums and bookshops with that theme since 2000.<ref name=saulge>{{Cite web|url=https://www.saulge.com/montmorillon|title=Montmorillon: one of Vienne's prettiest historical cities {{!}} Saulgé.com|website=saulge.com|access-date=2019-09-12}}</ref> The idea that Montmorillon should be a [[Book town]] came from Deforges who was then a local councillor. The town had a history of paper-making and her idea received both local and international support. The old medieval quarter of the town attracted six million euros of funding and now brands itself as a book town.<ref name="Johnson2018">{{cite book|author=Alex Johnson|title=Book Towns|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YN9aDwAAQBAJ|date=5 April 2018|publisher=Frances Lincoln (White Lion 2)|isbn=978-1-78101-242-0}}</ref>


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
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===Novels and short stories===
===Novels and short stories===
* ''O m'a dit'' ("O Told Me"), conversations with the author of ''[[Story of O]]'' (1975)
* ''O m'a dit'' ("O Told Me"), conversations with the author of ''[[Story of O]]'' (1975)
* ''Blanche et Lucie'' ("Blanche and Lucie"), short story about her two grandmothers ([[Fayard (édition)|Fayard]], 1976)
* ''Blanche et Lucie'' ("Blanche and Lucie"), short story about her two grandmothers ([[Fayard]], 1976)
* ''Le Cahier volé'' ("The Stolen Folder"), short story partly inspired by a childhood spent at the École Saint-Martial de [[Montmorillon]] ([[Fayard (édition)|Fayard]], 1978)
* ''Le Cahier volé'' ("The Stolen Folder"), short story partly inspired by a childhood spent at the École Saint-Martial de [[Montmorillon]] (Fayard, 1978)
* ''[[Les Contes pervers]]'' ("Perverted Tales"), her first erotic work (1980), later adapted for cinema
* ''[[Les Contes pervers]]'' ("Perverse Tales"), her first erotic work (1980), later adapted for cinema
* ''[[La Révolte des nonnes]]'' ("The Nuns' Revolt", Fayard, 1981), adapted for television as ''L'Enfant des Loups'' ("Child of Wolves") in 1991
* {{ill|La Révolte des nonnes|fr|italics=yes}} ("The Nuns' Revolt", Fayard, 1981), adapted for television as ''L'Enfant des Loups'' ("Child of Wolves") in 1991
* ''Les Enfants de Blanche'' ("Blanche's Children"), a sequel to ''Blanche et Lucie'' (1982)
* ''Les Enfants de Blanche'' ("Blanche's Children"), a sequel to ''Blanche et Lucie'' (1982)
* ''Sur les bords de la Gartempe'' ("On the Banks of the [[Gartempe]]"), comprising ''Blanche et Lucie'', ''Les Enfants de Blanche'' and ''Le Cahier volé''
* ''Sur les bords de la Gartempe'' ("On the Banks of the [[Gartempe]]"), comprising ''Blanche et Lucie'', ''Les Enfants de Blanche'' and ''Le Cahier volé''
* ''Lola et quelques autres'' ("Lola and a Few Others"), short story collection (Fayard, 1983)
* ''Lola et quelques autres'' ("Lola and a Few Others"), short story collection (Fayard, 1983)
* ''L'Orage'', ("The Storm", [[Éditions Blanche]], 1986)
* ''L'Orage'', ("The Storm", {{ill|Éditions Blanche|fr}}, 1986)
* ''Pour l'amour de Marie Salat'' ("For Love of Marie Salat", [[Éditions Albin Michel|Albin Michel]], 1987)
* ''Pour l'amour de Marie Salat'' ("For Love of Marie Salat", [[Éditions Albin Michel|Albin Michel]], 1987)
* ''Sous le ciel de Novgorod'' ("Under the Skies of [[Novgorod]]", Fayard, 1989)
* ''Sous le ciel de Novgorod'' ("Under the Skies of [[Novgorod]]", Fayard, 1989)
* ''Troubles de femmes'' ("Women's Troubles"), short story ([[Éditions Spengler]], 1994)
* ''Troubles de femmes'' ("Women's Troubles"), short story ({{ill|Éditions Spengler|fr}}, 1994)
* ''Journal d'un éditeur'' ("An Editor's Journal")
* ''Journal d'un éditeur'' ("An Editor's Journal")
* ''Rencontres ferroviaires'' ("Railroad Meetings", [[Fayard (édition)|Fayard]], 1999)
* ''Rencontres ferroviaires'' ("Railroad Meetings", Fayard, 1999)
* ''La petite fille au manteau rose'' ("The Little Girl in the Pink Jacket"), short story in ''Chemin faisant'', a collection of stories set on public transport ([[Le Serpent à plumes]], 2001)
* ''La petite fille au manteau rose'' ("The Little Girl in the Pink Jacket"), short story in ''Chemin faisant'', a collection of stories set on public transport ([[Le Serpent à plumes]], 2001)
* ''La Hire, ou la colère de Jeanne'' ("[[La Hire]], or the Fury of Joan"), historical novel about [[Joan of Arc]]
* ''La Hire, ou la colère de Jeanne'' ("[[La Hire]], or the Fury of Joan"), historical novel about [[Joan of Arc]]
Line 45: Line 45:


===La Bicyclette bleue===
===La Bicyclette bleue===
* 1981 : ''[[La Bicyclette bleue]]'' ("The Blue Bicycle", Fayard) / 1987 : Le Livre de Poche (LGF)
* 1981: {{ill|La Bicyclette bleue|fr|italic=yes}} (''The Blue Bicycle'', Fayard) / 1987 : Le Livre de Poche (LGF)
* 1983 : ''[[101, avenue Henri Martin]]'' ("No. 101, Henri Martin Avenue", Fayard) / 1987 : Le Livre de Poche (LGF)
* 1983: {{ill|101, avenue Henri Martin|fr|italic=yes}} (''No. 101, Henri Martin Avenue'', Fayard) / 1987 : Le Livre de Poche (LGF)
* 1985 : ''[[Le Diable en rit encore]]'' ("The Devil's Still Laughing About It", Fayard) / 1988 : Le Livre de Poche (LGF)
* 1985: {{ill|Le Diable en rit encore|fr|italic=yes}} (''The Devil's Still Laughing About It'', Fayard) / 1988 : Le Livre de Poche (LGF)
* 1991 : ''[[Noir tango]]'' ("Black Tango", Fayard) / 1993 : Le Livre de Poche (LGF)
* 1991: {{ill|Noir tango|fr|italic=yes}} (''Black Tango'', Fayard) / 1993 : Le Livre de Poche (LGF)
* 1994 : ''[[Rue de la Soie]]'' ("Silk Road", Fayard) / 1996 : Le Livre de Poche (LGF)
* 1994: {{ill|Rue de la Soie|fr|italic=yes}} (''Silk Road'', Fayard) / 1996 : Le Livre de Poche (LGF)
* 1996 : ''[[La Dernière colline]]'' ("The Final Hill", Fayard) / 1999 : Le Livre de Poche (LGF)
* 1996: {{ill|La Dernière colline|fr|italic=yes}} (''The Final Hill'', Fayard) / 1999 : Le Livre de Poche (LGF)
* 1999 : ''[[Cuba libre!]]'' ("To the Freedom of Cuba!", Fayard) / 2001 : Le Livre de Poche (LGF)
* 1999: {{ill|Cuba libre!|fr|italic=yes}} (''To the Freedom of Cuba!'', Fayard) / 2001 : Le Livre de Poche (LGF)
* 2001 : ''[[Alger, ville blanche]]'' ("Algiers, White City", Fayard) / 2003 : Le Livre de Poche (LGF)
* 2001: {{ill|Alger, ville blanche|fr|italic=yes}} (''Algiers, White City'', Fayard) / 2003 : Le Livre de Poche (LGF)
* 2003 : ''[[Les Généraux du crépuscule]]'' ("The Generals of Twilight", Fayard) / 2005 : Le Livre de Poche (LGF)
* 2003: {{ill|Les Généraux du crépuscule|fr|italic=yes}} (''The Generals of Twilight'', Fayard) / 2005 : Le Livre de Poche (LGF)
* 2007 : ''[[Et quand viendra la fin du voyage]]'' ("And When the Trip is Over", Fayard)
* 2007: {{ill|Et quand vient la fin du voyage|fr|italic=yes}} (''And When the Trip is Over'', Fayard)


===Essays===
===Essays===
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==Filmography==
==Filmography==
* ''Les Filles de madame Claude'' (''The Daughters of Mme Claude''; director, 1980)
* ''Contes Pervers'' (aka ''Les Filles de Madame Claude'' / ''Erotic Tales''; director, 1980)


==References==
==References==
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[[Category:French women film directors]]
[[Category:French women film directors]]
[[Category:20th-century French novelists]]
[[Category:20th-century French novelists]]
[[Category:20th-century dramatists and playwrights]]
[[Category:20th-century French dramatists and playwrights]]
[[Category:20th-century French women writers]]
[[Category:20th-century French women writers]]
[[Category:Prix Maison de la Presse winners]]
[[Category:Prix Maison de la Presse winners]]

Latest revision as of 05:27, 9 June 2024

Régine Deforges
Régine Deforges (1996)
Born(1935-08-15)15 August 1935
Montmorillon, France
Died3 April 2014(2014-04-03) (aged 78)
Paris, Frankreich
OccupationAutor
Known forLa Bicyclette bleue

Régine Deforges (15 August 1935 – 3 April 2014) was a French author, editor, director, and playwright.[1] Her book La Bicyclette bleue was the most popular book in France in 2000 and it was known by some to be offensive and to others for its plagiarism, neither of which was proved.

Leben

[edit]

Deforges was born in Montmorillon, Vienne, Deforges is sometimes called the High Priestess of French erotic literature. Deforges was the first woman to own and operate a publishing house in France.[2] Over the years, she has been censored, prosecuted, and heavily fined for publishing "offensive" literature, beginning with Louis Aragon: Irene's Cunt.[3]

One of her novels, La Bicyclette bleue [fr] (The Blue Bicycle), published in 1981, was France's biggest bestseller. In 2000, it was made into a television series. A story of love, obsession, and survival set during the turmoil of World War II, it developed into a successful series of seven books.[4][5] La Bicyclette bleue would go on to cause a major international intellectual property court case. In the initial ruling, Deforges was found guilty of plagiarizing Margaret Mitchell's famous novel Gone with the Wind. Deforges freely admitted that the first 70 pages were inspired by Mitchell's novel but the whole book was 1200 pages long.[6] She won her case on appeal, and the ruling ordering her to pay damages was reversed.[7] She was formerly president of the Société des Gens de Lettres de France and a member of the Prix Femina jury. She lived in Paris.

Deforges transformed her home town into a "City of Writing". It has had museums and bookshops with that theme since 2000.[8] The idea that Montmorillon should be a Book town came from Deforges who was then a local councillor. The town had a history of paper-making and her idea received both local and international support. The old medieval quarter of the town attracted six million euros of funding and now brands itself as a book town.[9]

Bibliography

[edit]

Novels and short stories

[edit]
  • O m'a dit ("O Told Me"), conversations with the author of Story of O (1975)
  • Blanche et Lucie ("Blanche and Lucie"), short story about her two grandmothers (Fayard, 1976)
  • Le Cahier volé ("The Stolen Folder"), short story partly inspired by a childhood spent at the École Saint-Martial de Montmorillon (Fayard, 1978)
  • Les Contes pervers ("Perverse Tales"), her first erotic work (1980), later adapted for cinema
  • La Révolte des nonnes [fr] ("The Nuns' Revolt", Fayard, 1981), adapted for television as L'Enfant des Loups ("Child of Wolves") in 1991
  • Les Enfants de Blanche ("Blanche's Children"), a sequel to Blanche et Lucie (1982)
  • Sur les bords de la Gartempe ("On the Banks of the Gartempe"), comprising Blanche et Lucie, Les Enfants de Blanche and Le Cahier volé
  • Lola et quelques autres ("Lola and a Few Others"), short story collection (Fayard, 1983)
  • L'Orage, ("The Storm", Éditions Blanche [fr], 1986)
  • Pour l'amour de Marie Salat ("For Love of Marie Salat", Albin Michel, 1987)
  • Sous le ciel de Novgorod ("Under the Skies of Novgorod", Fayard, 1989)
  • Troubles de femmes ("Women's Troubles"), short story (Éditions Spengler [fr], 1994)
  • Journal d'un éditeur ("An Editor's Journal")
  • Rencontres ferroviaires ("Railroad Meetings", Fayard, 1999)
  • La petite fille au manteau rose ("The Little Girl in the Pink Jacket"), short story in Chemin faisant, a collection of stories set on public transport (Le Serpent à plumes, 2001)
  • La Hire, ou la colère de Jeanne ("La Hire, or the Fury of Joan"), historical novel about Joan of Arc
  • Le collier de perles ("The Pearl Necklace", Albin Michel) ISBN 2-226-15510-4 / 2006 : Le Livre de Poche (LGF) ISBN 2-253-11767-6 / 2004

La Bicyclette bleue

[edit]

Essays

[edit]

Anthologies

[edit]
  • Les Cent plus beaux cris de femmes ("The Hundred Most Beautiful Cries of Women", Cherche-Midi Éditeur, 1980)[10]
  • La Chanson d'amour, petite anthologie ("The Love Song", Éditions Mango-Images, 1999)
  • Poèmes de femmes ("Poems by Women", Cherche-Midi Éditeur, 1993)

Tales

[edit]
  • Léa au pays des dragons, ("Léa in the Land of Dragons", 1982)
  • L'Apocalypse de saint Jean ("The Apocalypse of St John", Éditions Ramsay, 1985)
  • L'Arche de Noé de grand-mère ("Grandmother's Noah's Ark", Éditions Calligram, 1995)
  • Léa au pays des dragons (réédition par Nathan, 1991)
  • Léa et les diables ("Léa and the Demons", Seuil, 1991)
  • Léa et les fantômes ("Léa and the Ghosts", Seuil, 1992)
  • Le Couvent de sœur Isabelle ("The Convent of Sister Isabelle", Seuil, 1992)
  • Les Chiffons de Lucie ("Lucie's Scraps", Éditions Calligram, 1993)
  • Les Poupées de grand-mère ("Grandmother's Dolls", Stock, 1994)

Filmography

[edit]
  • Contes Pervers (aka Les Filles de Madame Claude / Erotic Tales; director, 1980)

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Savigneau, Josyane (3 April 2014). "Mort de Régine Deforges, l'auteure de " La Bicyclette bleue". Le Monde. Retrieved 4 April 2014.
  2. ^ Theodore Zeldin, The French (NY: HarperCollins, 1983), 147. ISBN 9780006540731
  3. ^ Pierre Perrone (28 April 2014). "Régine Marie Deforges". The Independent.
  4. ^ "Lettre à Régine Deforges (sur Israel Shamir)". phdn.org. Retrieved 6 October 2014.
  5. ^ WIEVIORKA, M. (2012). La tentation antisémite. ROBERT LAFFONT/BOUQUINS/SEGHER. ISBN 9782221136140. Retrieved 6 October 2014.
  6. ^ Riding, Alan; Times, Special To the New York (7 December 1989). "Court Finds French Author Plagiarized 'Gone with Wind'". The New York Times.
  7. ^ "An Author is Cleared of Plagiarism Charges". The New York Times. 22 November 1990.
  8. ^ "Montmorillon: one of Vienne's prettiest historical cities | Saulgé.com". saulge.com. Retrieved 12 September 2019.
  9. ^ Alex Johnson (5 April 2018). Book Towns. Frances Lincoln (White Lion 2). ISBN 978-1-78101-242-0.
  10. ^ Régine Deforges (1 January 1985). Les Cent Plus Beaux Cris de femmes. cherche midi (réédition numérique FeniXX). pp. 1–. ISBN 978-2-7491-4475-7.
[edit]