- Bernard Pivot
Bernard Pivot (born
5 May 1935 ) is ajournalist , interviewer and host of French culturaltelevision programmes. He is a member of theAcadémie Goncourt .Biography
Pivot was born in
Lyon , the son ofgrocer s. DuringWorld War II his father, Charles Pivot, was taken prisoner and his mother moved to the family home to the village ofQuincié-en-Beaujolais , where Bernard Pivot started school.In 1945 his father was released, and the reunited family returned to Lyon. At age 10, Pivot went to a
Catholic boarding school and discovered a consuming passion for sport, a passion which helped teachers to overlook his general mediocrity in all traditional school subjects exceptFrench language andhistory .After starting studies in
law in Lyon, Pivot entered theCentre de formation des journalistes (CFJ) inParis , where he met his future wife, Monique. He graduated second in his class.After an internship at "Le progrès" in Lyon, he studied economic journalism for a full year, then joined the "
Figaro littéraire " in 1958.In 1970 he hosted a daily humorous radio programme that often raised political issues, which was not appreciated by
Georges Pompidou .In 1971 the "Figaro littéraire" closed and Pivot joined "
Le Figaro ". He left, however, in 1974 after a disagreement withJean d'Ormesson .Jean-Jacques Servan-Schreiber invited him to start a new project, which led to the creation of a new magazine, "Lire ", a year later.Meanwhile, in April 1973 he had started hosting a programme called "Ouvrez les Guillemets" on France's first TV network. In 1974, the
ORTF was dissolved and Pivot started his "Apostrophes" programme. "Apostrophes" was first broadcast onAntenne 2 onJanuary 10 ,1975 , and ran until 1990. Pivot then created "Bouillon de culture", whose scope he tried to broaden beyond books. He eventually came back to books, however.On
April 10 ,2008 Pivot was made an honorary member of theOrder of Canada .Spelling championships
In 1985, with linguist
Micheline Sommant , Pivot created the "Championnats d'orthographe" (spelling championships) which in 1992 became "Championnats mondiaux d'orthographe" ("world spelling championships") then in 1993 the "Dicos d'or" ("golden dictionaries").These yearly contests are held in three phases:
* During the spring, selection tests are organised with the press, in particular with "Lire", and in a few local communities (e.g. schools). These are multiple-choice questionnaires.
* During the fall, the selected candidates meet region by region at the semi-finals. They get again multiple-choice questionnaires, and a dictation.
* Then, during winter, the finals are held at a single place.There are four categories: school juniors, juniors, professional seniors and amateur seniors.
Participation is free of charge, except for the cost of the magazines that publish the selection tests.
Partial filmography
* "Apostrophes" (1975–1986)
* "Bouillon de culture" (1991–2001)
* "Double je" (2002–2005)Bernard Pivot and James Lipton
James Lipton was inspired by a chance viewing of a Pivot programme oncable TV to create "Inside the Actors Studio ". Lipton adapted Pivot's use of aProust Questionnaire to one that he himself used at the end of each episode of "Inside the Actors Studio".Pivot became aware that Lipton was inspired by his questionnaire, and invited Lipton to appear on the final episode of "Bouillon de Culture".
Lipton is currently attempting to have the "Apostrophes" and "Bouillon de Culture" programmes dubbed into English for broadcast in the
United States .Fact|date=February 2007External links
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