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Sébastien Japrisot

Sébastien Japrisot
Born Jean-Baptiste Rossi
(1931-07-04)4 July 1931
Marseille, France
Died 4 March 2003(2003-03-04) (aged 71)
Vichy, France
Pen name Sébastien Japrisot
Robert Huart
Occupation Author
Screenwriter
Film director
Nationality French
Period 1950-2003
Genre Literary fiction, thriller

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Sébastien Japrisot (4 July 1931 – 4 March 2003) was a French author, screenwriter and film director, born in Marseille. His pseudonym was an anagram of Jean-Baptiste Rossi, his real name. Japrisot has been nicknamed "the Graham Greene of France".

Famous in the Francophony, he is little known in the English-speaking world, though a number of his novels have been translated into English and have been made into films.

Sébastien Japrisot made his mark as an author at seventeen, when his novel Les Mal Partis was published in France and United States. He followed this with outstanding translations of J. D. Salinger's novels. He pursued a successful career in advertising and publicity.

In 1962, he had an intriguing idea for a crime novel. As he did not feel at ease about his entry into this new field, he used an anagram of his own name as his pseudonym. However, the reception to The 10.30 from Marseille left no one in doubt that a great crime writer had made his debut. The book was quickly made into The Sleeping Car Murders, a film by Costa-Gavras starring Yves Montand, Simone Signoret, Catherine Allégret, Jacques Perrin, etc.

His second mystery was Trap for Cinderella. This won the Grand Prix de Littérature Policière for 1963. The film starred Dany Carrel, and Madeleine Robinson.

He followed this with The Lady in the Car with Glasses and a Gun, which won him a second major French award - Le Prix d'Honneur 1966. In England it won the Crime Writer's Association Silver Dagger for the best Thriller published in the United Kingdom in 1968 by a foreign writer. It became a film by Anatole Litvak in 1970 with Samantha Eggar and Oliver Reed.


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