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Michèle Ray-Gavras

Michèle Ray-Gavras

Production1939Paris, France

Biography

Michèle Ray-Gavras (born 1939) is a French film producer and journalist.

As an independent journalist between 1963 and 1977, Michèle Ray covered struggles in Vietnam and Bolivia for multiple French media.

Between April 1966 and February 1967, while reporting on the Vietnam war, Michèle Ray travelled in South Vietnam among the American GI forces. She then continued to the communist north and was captured by the Vietcong on 17 January 1967. She was liberated on 6 February after falling sick. She brought back a special report published in the Nouvel Observateur, a film that was used in the documentary Far from Vietnam, and she published a book, The Two Shores of Hell.

She traveled to Bolivia in 1967 to report on the capture and death of Che Guevara, publishing an article in Paris Match before being expelled from the country. In 1971, Michèle Ray was covering the Uruguayan general election for French television and radio, when she was kidnapped by the anarchist group OPR-33 and held for 3 days, between 29 November and 3 December before being released. Costa Gavras was in Uruguay at the time, preparing his film State of Siege.

Description above from the Wikipedia article Michèle Ray-Gavras, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Acting History

2019
2015
Graziella
Producer
2012
Capital
Producer
2010
Burke & Hare
as French Family
2007
2006
The Colonel
Producer
2005
Suzanne
Thanks
The Ax
Producer
1995
Pereira Declares
Co-Producer
1994
Cemetery Man
Executive Producer
1986
1985
1983
Hanna K.
Executive Producer
1975
1967
Far from Vietnam
as Narrator (segment "Victor Charlie") (voice)
Far from Vietnam
Camera Operator

Social Media

Personal Info

Known For
Production
Gender
Female
Birthday
1/1/1939(87 years old)
Place of Birth
Paris, France