Arthur (TV presenter)

Arthur

Arthur in 2010
Born Jacques Essebag
(1966-03-10) 10 March 1966
Casablanca, Morocco
Occupation Television host

Arthur (born Jacques Essebag on 10 March 1966 in Casablanca, Morocco) is a TV presenter, producer and comedian.

After having cancelled his law studies, he began his career as a host on local radio in the Paris region in the late 1980s. In the early 1990s, he found a certain notoriety by presenting programs on Fun Radio, Europe 1 and Europe 2 (Arthur et les pirates, PlanetArthur and Radio Arthur). He became, from 1991, host of television programs, first on France 2 and TF1 (Les Enfants de la télé, La Fureur).

Meanwhile, he started a theater career with two one-man shows, Arthur en vrai (2005) and I Show (2009) and portraying Peter Brochan in Le Dîner de Cons (2007), alongside Dany Boon.

Since the mid-1990s, he has also been an entrepreneur in the audiovisual field. He was, until 2006, vice president of the French subsidiary of production company Endemol. Since 2008, he has been the owner of Ouï FM.

Early years

Jacques Essebag was born on 10 March 1966 in Casablanca. His father, Michel Essebag, was a chartered accountant and his mother a housewife. He has a brother Olivier. Like many Sephardi Jews, his parents left Morocco in 1967, during the Six-Day War[1] and settled in the Paris region, in Massy. After high school, he began studying law at Sceaux, at the Faculty of Law Jean Monnet of the University of Paris-Sud 11. While he repeated his first year, he made his first radio appearance, on the local radio station Massy-Pal, on which he hosted the show Tonus which provided sports scores for the city.[2]

Radio career

In 1987, he became a presenter on RFM. He took the pseudonym of Arthur to distinguish from a homonym.[2] In 1988, he spent a short time on Kiss Fm, then joined Skyrock in 1989.[3] With Skyman, he created Les zigotos du matin.

1990s

In 1991, he joined Fun Radio[2] to host programs from 6:30 am–9:00 am, in which he created games such as the provocative Orgasmotron (simulation of a live female orgasm). His notoriety grew when, thanks to a publicity campaign for his program in which he presented himself as "the greatest cunt of the FM band". On Fun, he met Emmanuel Lévy, aka Maître Lévy, who became his director and accompanied him in his TV career.

He left Fun Radio the following season in 1992 to join Europe 1, which wanted to rejuvenate its audience. There he hosted for four seasons Arthur et les pirates, between 4.30 pm-6.00 pm, with Maître Levy, Alexandre Devois (Captain Sboob), Princess Jade (met on Skyrock), Rémy Caccia and Michèle Bernier. He hosted the same games as he did on Fun. During the first season, the show took place among the audience.

In September 1996, he returned on Europe 2 to host La Matinale from 8 am to 9:30 am, then from 7:30 am to 9 am from 1997. The show was recorded a series of sketches with false listeners. The humoristic team was composed of Maître Levy, Gad Elmaleh, Axelle Laffont, Tex, Gus (Gustave de Kervern of Groland), François Meunier (JC of Skyrock) and Philippe Lelièvre.

2000s

At the beginning of 2000, Arthur left Europe 2 and hosted PlanetArthur on Fun Radio, every afternoon from 4.00 pm to 6.30 pm, alongside Maître Levy, Myriam, Valérie Benaïm and Cyril Hanouna.

When Sébastien Cauet arrived on Fun Radio in September 2004, Arthur wanted to leave the radio and contacted his lawyers. He alleged, in effect, that Cauet had previously made a joke about Nazi concentration camps[4] in 1995 and therefore refused to work on the same radio. Fun Radio did not accept to let him go, arguing that the contract ended on 30 June 2005 and forced him to continue to host PlanèteArthur, in September 2004. Arthur then made three programs entitled Libérez Arthur, in which he explicitly asked to be released from his contract, particularly in disseminating support messages from his friends from show business and did some parodies of the station Director, played by Jonathan Lambert. On 9 September, Fun Radio stopped the broadcast.[5] In November 2004, a court broke the contract with Fun Radio for the benefit of the radio, but not allow damages.[6] In October 2007, Arthur and Cauet finally reconciled : Cauet attended a performance of Le Diner de Cons,[7] then Arthur participated in La Méthode Cauet, on 20 December 2007, then Cauet was invited to the evening of Christmas Eve, on 31 December 2007, hosted by Arthur.

A few months later, he moved to Europe 2 on which he hosted Arthur et les Pirates between 4.00 pm and 6.00 pm, with Maître Levy, Princesse Jade and Jonathan Lambert. His first show was the world record of running of a radio show (33 consecutive hours, from 25 November 2004, 4:00 pm, to 26 November, 1:00 am). This record was later beaten by Cauet on Fun Radio. This program, entitled 33 heures chrono, was produced as DVD and adapted in a series of programs on MCM.

From September 2005 to February 2006, he hosted a new program, Radio Arthur, with Manu Levy, Jaz and Jonathan Lambert.

TV career

In 1992, he began a TV career with L'Émission impossible on TF1. The program, aired on Friday night at midnight, was composed of talk shows and provocative drama by Howard Stern. The show was a failure but introduced to the general public comedians such as Élie Semoun, Dieudonné M'bala M'bala, Laurent Violet and Alexandre Devoise.

In 1994, he presented on France 2 Les Enfants de la télé, alongside Pierre Tchernia. On France 2, he also hosted in 1996, La Fureur du samedi soir, a karaoke program co-presented by Pascal Sevran. Later he exported these programs on TF1 at the same time as Les Enfants de la télé. He also co-hosted the Victoires de la Musique with Michel Drucker.

Arthur then launched other entertainments on TF1, like Rêve d'un soir and 120 minutes de bonheur. The show CIA, co-hosted and co-produced in 2001 by Dominique Farrugia, was a failure. The program consisted of a series of humorous journalistic investigations.

Arthur also produced other successful programs such as Exclusif on TF1 or La Grosse Émission on Comédie !, through his company named Case Productions, which he was co-owner with producer Stéphane Courbit, and which was later renamed ASP.

In 2001, Arthur became vice president of Endemol France, created after the acquisition of ASP by Endemol. The company launched many TV reality shows in France. Endemol France bought many other production companies and Arthur sold his shares in Endemol in late 2006.

Arthur continued to host Les Enfants de la Télé and other successful programs including TF1's À prendre ou à laisser, a local version of Deal or No Deal. He presented the 2007 NRJ Music Awards on 20 January 2007. His show was sponsored by NRJ Radio.

In August 2007, he decided to leave À prendre ou à laisser to devote himself to his new theater career in Le Dîner de Cons. Les Enfants de la télé and the Christmas Eve remain at present his only TV shows.

On 5 January 2009, he hosted again À prendre ou à laisser for a quarter year.

Since 8 November 2010, Arthur hosts Ce Soir Avec Arthur on the Comedie! channel, a weekly mix of news and humor. At his side, comedians Claudia Tagbo, Ary Abittan and Amelle Chahbi do separate segments. Critics and fans have noted how some segments, such as the opening credits and lip-synched musical numbers, are strikingly similar to those on the U.S. show The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson on CBS, including the use of completely identical puppets. Craig Ferguson spoke of his astonishment on his 22 November 2010 show,[8] equating the plagiarizing of his show to "taking pants from a hobo". Worldwide Pants Inc., who own the intellectual property of The Late Late Show, have not commented officially, but sources familiar with the matter said that legal action was being contemplated. However, Arthur made an appearance on Ferguson's program on 29 November, arguing that the similarities are an homage rather than a copy, and indicating that no animosity exists between the two hosts; the program ended with the two imitating the final scene of Casablanca and suggesting a new friendship. In June 2011, Craig went to France with Kristen Bell and his robot sidekick, Geoff Peterson, during which he appeared on Arthur's show.

Theater career

In September 2005, Arthur began a theater career with a first one-man show by Isabelle Nanty entitled Arthur en vrai, in which he wanted to "present himself to the public" and to change his image.[9] During the first tour, this show was played in Europe, North Africa and Quebec[10] and was seen by over 100,000 people in France.[11]

In 2007, Arthur spent a casting to portray Pierre Brochan in Le Dîner de Cons, alongside Dany Boon.[12] Francis Veber, the director, choose him and gave him the role of Pierre Brochan previously played by Claude Brasseur / Michel Roux on stage and Thierry Lhermitte in the film adaptation. Well received by critics, the show was played over 200 times and seen by 150,000 people.[13][14] The tour ended in March 2008, one month ahead of schedule, due to the success Dany Boon's Bienvenue chez les Ch'tis.[15][16]

Three years after Arthur en vrai, Arthur began in late 2008 I Show, a new comedy show[9] in which he analyzes various aspects of new technologies.[17] In January 2009, a performance in Ardèche was canceled because of pro-Palestinian demonstrations related to Israel's campaign in Gaza and accusations of financial support to Israel.[18] In February 2009, three new performances were canceled and Arthur took a public stand in an article published in Le Monde in which he complained of being a victim of an anti-Semitic campaign.[19]

Personal life

Arthur is the father of a child named Samuel he had with a former model, Léa Vigny. On 12 February 2004, he married Estelle Lefébure, ex-wife of David Hallyday, after three years of cohabitation. They divorced in April 2008.[20][21]

In 2007, Arthur publicly supported Nicolas Sarkozy during the presidential campaign.[22]

Works

Bibliography

Theater / one-man show

TV programs

Filmography

Discography

References

  1. "L'animateur Arthur réagit aux manifestations d'antisémitisme à son égard", La Tribune de Genève tdg.ch Retrieved June 9, 2009
  2. 1 2 3 Arthur, Les Echos Lesechos.fr Retrieved June 9, 2009
  3. "Itinéraire d'un enfant bosseur", La Presse de Tunisie, p.5 Lapresse.tn Retrieved June 9, 2009
  4. "Arthur, Cauet et Auschwitz", L'Express Lexpress.fr Retrieved June 9, 2009
  5. "Fun Radio prive Arthur d'antenne", Le Nouvel Observateur Nouvelobs.com Retrieved June 9, 2009
  6. "Arthur perd en justice face à Cauet", Le Nouvel Observateur Nouvelobs.com Retrieved June 9, 2009
  7. "Arthur et Cauet sur la voie de la réconciliation", Ozap Ozap.com Retrieved June 9, 2009
  8. "The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson" Retrieved November 23, 2010
  9. 1 2 "Arthur dans « iShow », mercredi à Lille : « Le kif suprême d'avoir le public en face »", La Voix du Nord Lavoixdunord.fr Retrieved June 9, 2009
  10. "En terrain vierge", Voir Voir.ca Retrieved June 9, 2009
  11. "Arthur, spectacle - iShow", France 3 France3.fr Retrieved June 9, 2009
  12. "Bientôt au théâtre dans la pièce de Francis Veber", TV Mag Tvmag.com Retrieved June 9, 2009
  13. "Arthur : « La rumeur, j'en fais un sketch »", TV Mag Tvmag.com Retrieved June 9, 2009
  14. "Arthur sur scène « chez lui »", Le Parisien Laparisien.fr Retrieved June 9, 2009
  15. "Un café et l'addition, de cons", Voici Voici.fr Retrieved June 9, 2009
  16. "Quand notre cœur fait BOON", L'Illustré Illustre.ch Retrieved June 9, 2009
  17. "Arthur revient dans I Show", Actu24 Actu24.be Retrieved June 9, 2009
  18. "L'annulation de deux spectacles ravive la crainte de l'antisémitisme", AFP Google.com Retrieved June 9, 2009
  19. "D'où vient cette haine des incendiaires des âmes ?", Le Monde Lemonde.fr Retrieved June 9, 2009
  20. "Estelle et Arthur, c'est fini", Le Vif Levif.be Retrieved June 9, 2009
  21. "Arthur et Estelle se séparent", La Dernière Heure Dhnet.be Retrieved June 9, 2009
  22. "Sarkozy drague à gauche", L'Express lexpress.fr Retrieved June 9, 2009

External links

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