Frédéric Mitterrand, former Minister of Culture, is dead – L’Express

Frederic Mitterrand former Minister of Culture is dead – LExpress

A haunting voice with recognizable phrasing: the former Minister of Culture and TV man, Frédéric Mitterrand, 76, died after a fight of “several months against an aggressive cancer”, his family announced this Thursday March 21st.

Nephew of former president François Mitterrand, minister under Nicolas Sarkozy, this unclassifiable personality, a great film buff, announced in April 2023 that he was “sick”, without saying more.

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“The death of Frédéric Mitterrand upsets me. A friendship of more than 60 years linked us with unalterable affection. Throughout his life, he served the arts with passion, erudition and love. Our common loyalty to François Mitterrand united us deeply”, reacted on (ex-Twitter) Jack Lang, former socialist Minister of Culture.

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Also a writer, Frédéric Mitterrand did not hesitate to confess his “bad life”. In 2005, he told the story of his sexual and paid wanderings in Thailand and the Maghreb. First praised, the book then sparked controversy, forcing him to defend himself from any relationship with minors or any apology for child crime.

Passion for cinema

Born on August 21, 1947 in the beautiful neighborhoods of Paris, Frédéric Mitterrand made a name for himself thanks to the small screen. “Stars and Canvases” is the name of the first show he hosted on the front page from 1981: there he flamboyantly resurrects the stars, especially the actresses, and dissects the great films. The man instills his cinephilia in the viewer.

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Despite his name, he refuses to follow in the footsteps of an uncle he admires. In June 1993, he joined the Movement of Left Radicals (MRG). In May 1995, he supported Jacques Chirac, presidential candidate.

Appointed head of the Villa Medici in Rome by President Nicolas Sarkozy in 2008, he returned to Paris a few months later to take over the Ministry of Culture, until the 2012 presidential election, lost by the right. In this position, he notably confronted entertainment workers, had the Hadopi law adopted and led major projects, some launched before his arrival: the Mucem in Marseille or the Philharmonie in Paris.

READ ALSO: Frédéric Mitterrand: “In government, I was a gadget”



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