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- 2013–TV Episode
- Comedian, actor, author, director and emblematic figure of the French stage and cinema of the 50s and 60s, Francis Blanche liked to change register, moving from radio to writing to television and cinema, living more than "hundred lives".
- Portrait of Charles Trenet. Twenty years after his death, this documentary offers a new look at the artist. When, in 1956, the singer appeared on television, he was 43 years old. And it is a man of 60 or even 70 years old that today's audience has known. The first Charles Trenet, the one who transported France when he was 25 or 30 years old, remains largely unknown. Yet it was this kid of genius who, at the age of 25, invented French chanson. But the archives that are scattered throughout this portrait also show that he invented a certain idea of joy. For joy in Trenet was a sport, a daily gymnastics.
- Semi-final highlights of Germany vs. France, plus Gabriel Clarke reports on Wales as they prepare to head home.
- Live ITV coverage of Euro 2016 presented by Mark Pougatch and Jacqui Oatley.
- Sacrée Soirée is a variety show broadcast on TF1 from September 2, 1987 to June 29, 1994, then from December 19, 2007 to December 16, 2009, for a total of 264 numbers, for 7 seasons, every Wednesday evening. The show was produced by GLEM (Gérard Louvin, Marie Christine Mouton) and presented by Jean-Pierre Foucault. Every Wednesday evening, the show welcomed three main guests from the world of theatre, cinema, literature or song likely to be the production reserved a surprise often with the complicity of a member of the entourage of the 'guest.
- One of the best all time before-prime-time show in France especially the mythical conduction of the couple Antoine de Caune and Philippe Gildas...every night with high level french and international celebrity and delirious sketches and imitations of de Caunes and friends.
- Les Victoires de la Musique is an annual French award ceremony where the Victoire accolade is delivered by the French Ministry of Culture to recognize outstanding achievement in the music industry. The show is televised.
- Champs-Élysées is a French television variety program presented by Michel Drucker and broadcast live from January 16, 1982 to June 1985 and from January 1986 until June 29, 1990 every Saturday evening on Antenne 2 and irregularly on France 2 from November 13, 2010 to May 11, 2013. The show owes its name to the fact that it is performed live from the Pavillon Gabriel, located on avenue Gabriel, along the avenue des Champs-Élysées in Paris. The theme song for the show's credits was composed by Jean-Pierre Bourtayre and Jean-Claude Petit. The credits choreography was composed by Redha.
- The César is the national film prize of France. He is named after the French sculptor César Baldaccini.
- The César is the national film prize of France. He is named after the French sculptor César Baldaccini.
- Apostrophes is a French literary television program produced and hosted by Bernard Pivot, broadcast live on Antenne 2 between January 10, 1975, and June 22, 1990, every Friday evening at 9:40 p.m. Defined by Bernard Pivot as a "magazine of ideas based on books", the program is gradually becoming a cultural magazine devoted to editorial news, if not to literature taken in its broadest sense. The program offered open discussions between four or five authors around a common subject, but also individual interviews (called "Grands Entretiens") with a single author when the latter had acquired an important place in the academic or literary field. In fifteen years of existence, Apostrophes has become the emblematic literary program of French television at this time, almost in reverse of the initial project. It owes this to a combination of favorable factors: advantageous programming at prime time, continuous support from the directors of the Antenne 27 channel, and an almost new French audiovisual landscape when the program was created. The personality of its presenter, the initial choice of the format of the program (debate around a theme that changes each week), and the heterogeneity of its speakers also play a preponderant role in the recognition of Apostrophes with the general public, book professionals but also literary "all-Paris".
- Midi Première is a French variety show presented by Danièle Gilbert, directed by Jacques Pierre and broadcast from January 6, 1975 until January 1, 1982 on TF1. The program was generally broadcast between 12:15 p.m. and 12:55 p.m., then giving way to the 1:00 p.m. TV news. However, the broadcast schedule could change, depending on the guests, and the setting where the recording of the program was shot. Certain performances by artists who have become cult like the one where Ringo jostles with a demonstrator in interpretation (1977), that of Dalida with the title There is always a song with the soundtrack that does not start, twice, at the right speed (1978), Claude François and his Clodettes, who, in the provinces, are unable to join "the set" in order to interpret his song, the latter being taken by the crowd of delirious fans (summer 1977) . The group Supertramp performed there with the title "Dreamer" on March 8, 1975.
- This 4-part film covers the emergence of the School of Fontainebleau, a sixteenth century artistic movement (dir: Yves Allain); the French "snow class", or how elementary school students live and learn in the Alps for one month (dir: Max Gérard); singer and poet Charles Trenet (dir: Luc Bérimont); and biology professor Jean-Marie Pelt on the links between man and certain plants (dir: Max Gérard).
- French politics, the Maginot Line, the Saar Offensive, Blitzkrieg warfare and the Nazi invasion of France and the Low Countries.