Guy Lux

Actor
BirthdayJun 21, 1919 (84 years old)
DeathdayJun 13, 2003
Place of birthParis, France
GenderMale

Guy Maurice Lux (21 June 1919 – 13 June 2003) was a French TV host and producer best known for his 1961 creation of the game show Intervilles and its numerous spinoffs. During his 40 year career, he produced, directed, hosted, and wrote more than 40 television shows. Lux was born Guy Maurice Lux on 21 June 1919 in Paris, France and has Alsatian ancestry. He attended Lycée Arago for high school then École Estienne for university. He studied fine arts and applied arts and studied to be a lyricist. In 1939, he joined the war effort as an ambulance driver but was taken prisoner by enemy troops. He escaped and joined the French Resistance and later the Allied troops. After the war, he was awarded the Escapees' Medal and a Croix de Guerre. Due in part to the economic conditions in post-war France, Lux had difficulty finding buyers for his songs. In the 1940s, he ran a hardware store in Asnières-sur-Seine, where he would set up games for his customers to play, especially during the Tour de France. He did not start working in media until 1952. Lux hosted his first game show, Contact, in 1960. This show would later become La roue tourne, which he hosted alongside Jean-Francois Chiappe and Marina Gray in 1960-1964. Another significant game show he hosted was Intervilles in 1962-1964, 1970-1971, 1973, and 1985-1991, almost the entire time with Léon Zitrone, Simone Garnier, and Claude Savarit. This show was based on the Italian programme Campanile sera and later inspired the British show It's a Knockout. He created and hosted the spinoffs Jeux sans frontières (all-Europe competition), Interneige (continuation of Jeux sans frontières), Intercontinents (international competition), Interglace (winter competitions), and Interchallenges. He also hosted Ring Parade and its sequel Système 2 and the popular variety show Le Schmilblick, which popularized the word schmilblick, similar to the English thingamajig. He created and produced the shows La Classe, La Une est à vous, Succès fous, Capitale d'un soir, and L'Or à l'appel as well. Though he mainly worked with television, he appeared, oftentimes as a fictionalized version of himself, in several films, including Clémentine chérie (1964), Bang Bang (1967), Les fous du stade (1972), Comme sur des roulettes (1977), and Le bourreau des cœurs (1983). He also wrote and composed the song "A la queue leu leu" which was sung by André Bézu, and recorded a comedy song called "Le Tango d'Intervilles" with co-host Léon Zitrone. In 2021, Lux and Zitrone were featured in the documentary Les Duos mythiques de la television as one of France's legendary duos. He wrote and directed Drôles de zèbres in 1977 and in 1980 created his own production company, People Production. He retired from his television career in 1993, due largely to his age and the new talent available elsewhere. ... Source: Article "Guy Lux" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.

Known for

Guy Lux

Sep 22, 1972

Guy Lux

Oct 12, 1983

Guy Lux

Mar 22, 1977

Guy Lux

Aug 3, 1964

Self (archive footage)

Jan 7, 2022

Guy Descartes

May 18, 1967

Self

Jan 12, 1972

Self

Jan 9, 1971

Self (archive footage)

Dec 30, 2016

Une personnalité

Oct 4, 1971

Self (uncredited)

May 10, 1973

Self - Host

Jul 19, 1962

Self - Host

Nov 4, 1971

Self - Host

Jan 19, 1975

Guy Lux

Sep 22, 1972

Guy Lux

Oct 12, 1983

Guy Lux

Mar 22, 1977

Guy Lux

Aug 3, 1964

Self (archive footage)

Jan 7, 2022

Guy Descartes

May 18, 1967

Acting


Participated in 10 movies, 6 TV series


2016




1977

Guy Lux, Director, Writer


1975

Self - Host



1973

Self (uncredited)


1972

Guy Lux



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