Juliette Benzoni


Juliette Benzoni was a French author and international bestseller in several genres, including historical romance, historical fiction, mystery and screenwriting. In 1998, at the age of 78, she received the Chevalier de l'Ordre National from President Jacques Chirac.
Known as the "Queen of History Novels" and "Daughter of Alexander Dumas", she wrote 86 books, which were translated into at least 22 languages.

Personal life

She was born Andrée-Marguerite-Juliette Mangin, the daughter of Marie-Susanne Arnold and Charles-Hubert Mangin. She grew up in an upper-middle-class family in Paris. At the age of nine she discovered her passion for history through reading a book about Joan of Arc, and her father encouraged her to read the books of Alexander Dumas by giving her a copy of The Three Musketeers
Benzoni was educated at the Lycée Fenelon, College d'Hulst and the Institut Catholique Paris, where she studied philosophy, law and literature.
She married a doctor, Maurice Gallois in 1941, and they moved to Dijon where she became the mother of two children. While studying the history of Burgundy she discovered the Order of the Golden Fleece, which was later to inspire the seven Catherine novels.
In 1950 her husband died of a heart attack, leaving her a widow at the age of 30 with two young children. She went to Morocco to visit her late husbands parents and found work at a radio station writing advertisements.
In Morocco she met a young French officer, Count André Benzoni di Conza from Corsica, and they married a few weeks before he was assigned to leave for Indochina to rejoin his regiment. Because of the unstable situation in Morocco, her husband wanted her to return to France, so in 1953 she went to live in the Parisian suburb of Saint-Mandé, where later her husband would become deputy mayor. Times were hard and she had to look for work, so she began employment as a journalist and author.
In 1982 her husband André Benzoni died, making her a widow for the second time. In January 1985 her son Jean-François Gallois died of a heart-attack, just like his father Maurice. It was the only time the author suffered from writer's block, while working on the first adventures of Le boiteux de Varsovie.
She lived in a Second Empire mansion with her daughter Anne Gallois, and went for long walks with her dog in the Bois de Vincennes, visiting her favourite library "Monaco" in Saint-Mandé. Her house was full of books from the cellar up to the first floor – not only literary encyclopaedias, history books, and travel guides but also collections of works by Agatha Christie, Anne Perry and Ken Follett. She travelled widely, and enjoyed gardening and cooking for her family and guests.

Career

Returning to Paris from Morocco in 1953, Benzoni started to work as a journalist, writing historical articles at the Journal du Dimanche and Histoire pour tous. Under the pseudonym "Juliette Jansen" she interviewed celebrities such as Erich von Stroheim, Jean Cocteau, Jean Marais, Charles Trenet and Maurice Chevalier. She also began writing narrative adaptations and scenarios for comic strips that ran in some of the daily newspapers in Paris under the aegis of Opera Mundi. Collaborating with artists Robert Bressy she wrote dialogue for the serial soap Dr. Claudette and Dr. Fu Manchu.
In 1959 she participated in the popular television quiz show Le Gros Lot. The topic was the Italian Renaissance, and the subject was Catherina Sforza. In spite of floundering on the second-to-last question, the next day she was summoned by Gérald Gauthier, director of the Press Agency at Opéra Mundi. Impressed by her historical knowledge, he asked her if she could write a historical novel in the same style as the Angelique series,, which Opéra Mundi had published with great success in 1956. Benzoni agreed, already having an idea inspired by the legend of the Golden Fleece, and began to write the adventures of a golden-haired beauty during the Hundred Years' War.
Catherine was released in 1962 as a cliffhanger in the daily newspaper France-Soir as Il suffit d'un amour. In 1963 newspaper Le Figaro wrote: “before the book was even published it beats all records: it is already sold to ten different countries”. France-Soir confirmed: “it has an unprecedented destiny in the history of publishing...” On 10 June 1964 Le Provençalwrote: “A heroine – who takes place – alongside Scarlett O'Hara and The Marquise of the Angels”.
Editions Trévise had in 1962, already published two collections of her short stories- La Reines tragiques and Aventuries du passé, but it was the Catherine novels that launched her career as a bestselling author.
In August 1964 Benzoni was invited to a cocktail party in London by Heinemann Ltd to introduce Catherine, One Love is Enough. There followed an interview with BBC radio reporter Leigh Crutchley introducing "Countess Juliette Benzoni di Conza" to the English press.
Inspired by the success, Benzoni continued to write. Seventeen historical series, a collection of eighteen short story novels, three stand alone novels, all in all eighty-six books, followed. For her researches Benzoni was often seen at the local library "Monaco" in Saint-Mandé. She travelled all over the world to visit castles, museums, monasteries, libraries and villages for her work. Sometimes a museum painting would inspire a new story. She never kept a computer; each morning at six-thirty she got up and started writing on her old electric typewriter and wrote three pages – never missing a day, even on Sundays.
From time to time she appeared on television to introduce one of her new books or to give an interview at a radio station.
In 1965 a song was composed by Paul Amar, text by J. Benzoni, called Catherine, il suffit d'un amour, sung first by Michèle Arnaud and later Bernard Stéphane.
She met many members of the nobility, historians, authors, professors, directors and entertainers. Benzoni and historian :fr:Alain Decaux|Alain Decaux were mutual admirers. He wrote the preface for her book Par le Fer ou le Poison, where he mentioned her love of Alexander Dumas, and said "vous aidez à faire aimer l’histoire aux Français".
American President Ronald Reagan and his wife Nancy sent her a letter from the White House, after reading her first novel of the Le Gerfaut series.
One of the factors in Benzoni's success as a Romancière was based on her thorough historical research. She wrote a series of books based on the histories of the castles in France, Le Roman des Châteaux de France, with a foreword by Stéphane Bern, journalist and moderator.
Although her later works were not widely translated, in 1984, she was one of the top ten female French writers whose works were translated into English.

Catherine Novels

see also Catherine
After the successful start of Catherine in Great Britain the American market also began to publish Benzoni's series 1967 with different book covers and titles. As Catherine and a Time for love had ended in 1968 with an epiloque, and the last two books were written years later in 1973 and 1979 due to the demand from her French readers for new Catherine adventures, the final sixth and seventh books were not commonly translated for overseas markets.
Later in 1985, Benzoni confessed to having " a weakness for Catherine, because she was the first of my heroines", wheareas Marianne, from a star for Napoleon " was an order by my publisher for the occasion of the bicentenary of the Emperor" Henri de Monfort wrote in his new books review "qui est la meilleure garantie du plaisir et de l’émotion qu’y prendra le lecteur. Ajoutez qu’il est de bonne langue et de bon style."
In 2014 the English publisher Telos Publishing bought the rights from Benzoni to re-issue the Catherine Series which included the never before translated seventh book La Dame de Montsalvy, titled The Lady of Montsalvy. Telos Publishing announced on their website that this time the Catherine novels would be full and unabridged translations.

''The Aldo Morosini Adventures''

In the Nineties, Benzoni created a new hero, a Venetian prince, "His Highness Aldo Morosini” an expert on historic and precious stones. As Bezoni explained at the end of a later edition of the first novel in the series, the Aldo Morosini Adventures originated in the request of a famous French actor for her to write a television series script for an adventure story set in Venice, with him in the leading role.
What started as a set of four novels, each titled after a famous precious stone, became a series of 15 books, enjoyed by both male and female readers. The adventures of the dashing Aldo Morosini were translated in Hungary, Portugal, Spain, Russia, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Greece and Poland. Due to its success, the author started writing new Aldo adventures in between other novels.
Although popular in Europe, as of 2017, no publishers have translated the books into English.
The last adventure of Aldo Morosini, Le Vol du Sancy: Des Carats pour Ava? was published by Plon two weeks before Benzoni's death in 2016. French historian, author and specialist in jewellery, Vincent Meylan wrote in his obituary for Benzoni "Aldo Morosini, the Venetian prince is in mourning..."

Filmography

see also Catherine
In 1968 the producer of the Angélique films was given rights to turn Catherine, One love is Enough into a film. Benzoni stated that when she saw the film, she “cried like a waterfall” because the producer Bernard Broderie had completely changed the story. This cinema adventure became a topic never to be mentioned again, although when French television approached her to adapt another novel Marianne, a star for Napoleon with director :fr:Marion Sarraut|Marion Sarraut to be in charge, she agreed.
In a 1983 press release for Marianne, une étoile pour Napoléon Benzoni writes "Thanks to Marion Sarraut, director after my heart... provided with a heart, sensibility and talent, a great artistic sense and an astonishingly sure flair to choose interpreters”. Quoting from an article in Tele star, dating from 15 March 1986 she said: “I do not want a director other than Marion”. Benzoni wrote the screenplay with Jean Chatenet and the television series became a huge success. Confidently she agreed in 1985 to the filming of Catherine, il suffit d'un amour. It was to be the longest series so far on French television. In 1987 followed Le Gerfaut, then La Florentine.
Catherine was first adapted in 1969 for cinema, as a French, German, and Italian Production by Bernard Broderie. Four years later Antenne 2 – SFP Production bought the filming rights for four of Benzoni's other books; Marianne, a star for Napoleon, Catherine, One Love is Enough, Le Gerfaut and La Florentine.
In 1973, Benzoni received the Alexandre Dumas Prix for her work to date, the Catherine and the Marianne series. As a fervent admirer of Alexander Dumas since childhood, she always kept the medal on her working table. In 1988 the Académie française awarded her with the Literature Prix Louis Barthou, for Félicia au Soliel Couchant. In 1998, at the age of 78, she received the Chevalier de l'Ordre National, awarded by the President of the French Republic.
Juliette Benzoni died peacefully in her sleep on 7 February, 2016 in Saint-Mandé, with, her daughter Anne at her side. In the book of condolence which was provided online, readers all over the world expressed their sadness She is buried at the Cemetery in Saint-Mandè Sud, with her mother, husband and son.

Publications

''The Series''

Series translated into English:
Not available in English