Apostrophes
Apostrophes was a live, weekly, literary, prime-time, talk show on French television created and hosted by Bern...
Acting
Maurice Sinet, known as Siné, is one of the leading figures of French satirical cartooning, renowned for his dark humor, fierce anticlericalism, and radical political commitments. His life was inextricably linked to a passion for drawing, jazz, and anti-colonial activism.
Maurice Albert Sinet was born in Paris, in a working-class neighborhood in the east of the city, at the end of 1928, into a modest family. His father was an artistic blacksmith and his mother a grocer. He grew up between Belleville, Ménilmontant, Barbès, and Pigalle, which instilled in him from a very young age a critical perspective on social inequality. At fourteen, he entered the École Estienne, studying drawing and model making while earning a living at night as a singer in cabarets. His time in the military, often spent in solitary confinement, reinforced his rejection of the army, the state, and imposed discipline.
After his military service, Siné began publishing his first cartoons in the early 1950s in the popular press, notably France Dimanche. In 1955, he received the Grand Prix de l’Humour Noir (Grand Prize for Black Humor) for the collection "Complaintes sans paroles" (Laments Without Words), which brought him to the attention of literary and artistic circles. His major success came in 1959 with the book "Les Chats" (The Cats), which established his distinctive, fierce, and poetic graphic style. At the same time, he became a political cartoonist for L’Express, where his anti-colonial cartoons during the Algerian War sparked controversy, lawsuits, and a reputation as an irrepressible provocateur.
Siné identified as libertarian, anti-capitalist, anti-colonialist, anti-clerical, and secular, positions he expressed unflinchingly in his cartoons and in the press. A signatory of the Manifesto of the 121 during the Algerian War, he defended the right to insubordination and the fight against French colonialism. Hostile to all institutionalized religions, he attacked both the Catholic Church and other clergy, becoming one of the leading voices of a radical left steeped in anarchism. Siné publicly supported the Palestinian cause, which allowed his detractors to accuse him of antisemitism, to which he responded by asserting that he defended political anti-Zionism, not hatred of Jews. His pro-Palestinian commitment was part of a broader set of anti-imperialist, anti-colonial, and anti-Israeli positions regarding the policies of Israel in the occupied territories.
Siné joined Charlie Hebdo in the early 1980s, where he made his mark with his political cartoons, dark humor, and attacks on power, money, and religious institutions. In July 2008, editor Philippe Val fired him after a column on Jean Sarkozy's possible conversion to Judaism, a column that led to accusations of antisemitism, which he vehemently denied. Siné denounced this as a betrayal of the libertarian and anticlerical spirit of satire, while Charlie Hebdo accepted his dismissal. In the aftermath, he launched his own weekly magazine, Siné Hebdo, followed by Siné Mensuel, where he continued his radical style.
Weakened by health problems, he underwent major lung surgery at Bichat Hospital in Paris and died on the night of May 4-5, 2016, at the age of 87. To the very end, he remained true to his image as a radical and committed cartoonist, having left a lasting mark on French political caricature.
Browse movies and TV shows featuring Siné
Apostrophes was a live, weekly, literary, prime-time, talk show on French television created and hosted by Bern...
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Feature film.