Colette Audry Explained
Colette Audry (6 July 1906 – 20 October 1990) was a French novelist, screenwriter, and critic.
Audry was born in Orange, Vaucluse. She won the Prix Médicis for the autobiographical novel Derrière la baignoire (Behind the Bathtub). As a screenwriter she first gained acclaim for The Battle for the Railway and also wrote for her sister Jacqueline.[1] In politics she was a member of the Anti-Stalinist left[2] [3] (she was a member of the Workers and Peasants' Socialist Party) and an associate to Simone de Beauvoir.[4] She died at Issy-les-Moulineaux, aged 84.
Selected filmography
Notes and References
- https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C0CE5D91E3AF930A15753C1A966958260 New York Times obituary
- Book: Brottman . Mikita . Mikita Brottman . The Great Grisby: Two Thousand Years of Literary, Royal, Philosophical, and Artistic Dog Lovers and Their Exceptional Animals . 2014 . Harper Collins . 978-0-06-230463-6 . 18 . 20 June 2020 . en.
- Book: Birchall . Ian H. . Ian Birchall . Sartre Against Stalinism . 2004 . Berghahn Books . 978-1-78238-973-6 . 5–8 . 20 June 2020 . en.
- http://www.radicalphilosophy.com/default.asp?channel_id=2188&editorial_id=10291 Radical Philosophy.com