Georges Belmont

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Georges Belmont, born Georges Pelorson (19 July 1909 – 26 December 2008), was a French writer and literary translator. His translations from English to French included the work of Evelyn Waugh, Henry James, Henry Miller, Graham Greene, Anthony Burgess and Erica Jong into French. He also wrote ten novels and poetry collections, and worked as a journalist, founding the glossy celebrity magazine Jours de France.[1]

Life

Georges Pelorson was born in

Vichy government in the second world war, he then became a journalist. After working as an editor at Paris Match, he founded and edited Jours de France in 1958.[4]

Belmont collected and published the memoires of

Proust's housekeeper, Céleste Albaret
, as Monsieur Proust (1973). He published his own autobiography in 2001.

Works

Translations

Novels

  • Un homme au crépuscule; roman, Paris: R. Julliard, 1966
  • Ex, roman, Paris: Denoël, 1969

Non-fiction

  • Entretiens de Paris: Henry Miller avec Georges Belmont, 1970. Translated by Antony Macnabb and Harry Scott as Face to face with Henry Miller: conversations with Georges Belmont, London, 1971; Henry Miller in conversation with Georges Belmont, Chicago, 1972
  • Monsieur Proust, 1973. Translated by Barbara Bray as Monsieur Proust: a memoir, 1976
  • Marilyn Monroe and the camera, London: Bloomsbury, 1989. (Interview originally published in Marie Claire, 1960.)
  • Souvenirs d'outre-monde: histoire d'une naissance, Paris: Calmann-Lévy, 2001

References

  1. ^ 'The Worm of Insubordination (Georges Belmont)', in John Taylor, Paths to Contemporary French Literature, vol. 3., Transaction Publishers, 2011, pp.175ff.
  2. ^ "FRAD001_EC 2014 19 - Belley 1909 - 1909 FRAD001_EC 2014 19 - 1909 Archives départementales de l'Ain".
  3. ^ Universalis.fr: "Georges Belmont"
  4. ^ Georges Belmont (1909–2008)