Patrick Poivre d'Arvor

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Patrick Poivre d'Arvor (right) with Paul Vergès and Maud Fontenoy 2512.
Patrick Poivre d'Arvor (right) with Paul Vergès and Maud Fontenoy 2512.

Patrick Poivre d'Arvor (born Patrick Poivre, September 20, 1947) is a French TV journalist and writer. He is a household name in France, and nicknamed PPDA. With over 30 years and in excess of 4,500 editions of television news to his credit, he is the longest serving current newsreader in the world.

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[edit] Biography

PPDA was born in Reims, France. He obtained his Baccalauréat at 15, the year he became a father. He attended the Institut d'études politiques de Paris, where he studied Law and Oriental Languages at the Institut national des langues et civilisations orientales.

[edit] Journalistic career

Poivre started training as a journalist at the Centre de formation des journalistes (CFJ) at 22. He obtained his first job in 1971 on France Inter as morning newsreader.

In 1974, at the time of Valéry Giscard d'Estaing's accession to the Presidency, Poivre joined Antenne 2.He made his first TV appearance there in 1975, and was anchorman for news bulletins from February 16, 1976 to July 28, 1983. After a brief stint with Canal+, he joined TF1 in 1986 for the Sunday program A la folie pas du tout and Ex Libris, from Frederic Lepage.

On August 31, 1987, he was made anchorman for the weekday news of TF1 at 8pm from Monday to Thursday, which he still presents (2008), and as such is the journalist most familiar to the French. He is satirised in the French puppet show Les Guignols de l'info on Canal+, where his alter ego is the puppet PPD, the news anchor.

On June 9, 2008, it was reported that Poivre d'Arvor would retire from the 8pm news, to be replaced by Laurence Ferrari.[1]

[edit] Professional controversies

His greatest controversy is the faked interview[2] - actually footage of a press conference with added questions - he purported to have made with Cuban President Fidel Castro, broadcast on December 16, 1991. Télérama journalist Pierre Carles exposed this fraud, which Poivre blamed on his colleague and co-interviewer Régis Faucon, after the latter had departed TF1[3].

On January 10, 1996, the Court of Appeal sentenced Poivre to 15 months in prison (suspended) and fined him 200,000 Francs for his part in misappropriation of public funds in a case involving Pierre Botton and his father-in-law and then deputy mayor of Lyon, Michel Noir. [4].

[edit] Personal life

He is married to Véronique, with whom he has three daughters and one son. One daughter, Solenn, committed suicide at a Paris metro station in 1995, aged 19, having been a long-term anorexic. Her plight became a symbol of the problems of anorexia and bulimia, with Poivre becoming a campaigner and writer on the issue. In December 2004, Bernadette Chirac, wife of former President Jacques Chirac, whose daughter also suffered from the disorder, opened a treatment centre in Paris for adolescents and named it “Maison de Solenn”.

Poivre caused controversy by presenting his regular news bulletin the evening after Solenn's death.

[edit] Controversies in his private life

For several years in the 1990s, rumours abounded that Poivre had had an affair with Claire Chazal, his weekend counterpart as TF1 8pm news anchor. The pair refused to confirm the story until August 2005, when Poivre acknowledged in "Confessions", a book of interviews to journalist Serge Raffy, that he was the father of Chazal's 10-year-old son, François. "We had set at [François' age] ten the time that this story would be revealed", Poivre said.

[edit] Published works

He has published many books, two of which are dedicated to his daughter Solenn. He has also written prefaces to books by other authors, and these are not listed here.

[edit] Trivia

  • In 2004, Poivre was cast in a minor voice-only role as a newscaster in the French version of the Pixar animated film The Incredibles (Les Indestructibles).
  • Poivre claims to be descended directly from Jacques Poivre, brother of Pierre Poivre (French article), who was an 18th century nobleman in the time of Louis XV, "d'Arvor" being Jacques Poivre's pseudonym. Poivre, his siblings and his three surviving children legally changed their surname to "Poivre d'Arvor" in 1994.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Mackenzie, James. "Star French news anchor "PPDA" to step down", Reuters, 9 June 2008. Retrieved on 2008-06-09. 
  2. ^ * Olivier Cyran, Mehdi Ba (et al), Almanach critique des médias (2005) - éditions Les Arènes. « PPDA/Castro - Fausse interview, vraie mensonge ». ISBN 2-912485-83-5
  3. ^ Les fabuleuses histoires de Poivre d’Arvor on Acrimed
  4. ^ Noir-Botton-Mouillot-PPDA : à Lyon plus dure est la cour d’appel on L'Humamité