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Roger Peyrefitte (17 August 1907 – 5 November
2000) was a French diplomat, writer of bestseller novels and gossipy non-fiction,
and a defender of gay rights.
Life and
work
Born in Castres, Tarn to a wealthy family, Peyrefitte
went to Jesuit and Lazarist boarding schools
and then studied language and literature in Toulouse. After graduating first of his year
from Institut d'Études
Politiques de Paris in 1930, he worked as an embassy secretary
in Athens between 1933 and
1938. Back in Paris, he had to resign in 1940 for personal reasons
before being reintegrated in 1943 and finally ending his diplomatic
career in 1945. In his novels, he often treated controversial
themes and his work put him at odds with the Roman Catholic church. He was the cousin of
the politician and writer Alain Peyrefitte.
He wrote openly about his homoerotic experiences
in boarding school in his 1944 first novel Les amitiés
particulières (Particular Friendships -- a term
used in seminaries to refer to friendships seen as too close and
exclusive, often incorrectly translated as "Special Friendships"),
which won the coveted prix Renaudot in 1945. The book was made
into a film of the same name in 1964. On the set, Peyrefitte met
the young aristocrat, Alain-Philippe
Malagnac d'Argens de Villèle and immediately formed a strong
professional and personal bond.[1]
Peyrefitte tells their story in Notre amour (1967) and
L'Enfant de cœur (1978). Malagnac would later marry performer Amanda Lear.
A cultivator of scandal, Peyrefitte attacked the Vatican and Pope Pius XII in
his book Les Clés de saint Pierre (1953), which earned him
the nickname of 'Pope of the Homosexuals'. The publication of the
book started a bitter quarrel with François Mauriac. Mauriac threatened
to resign from the paper he was working with at the time, L'Express if it did not stop
carrying advertisements for the book. The quarrel was exacerbated
by the release of the film adaptation of Les amitiés
particulières and culminated in a virulent open letter by
Peyrefitte in which he accused Mauriac of homophile inclinations and called him a tartuffe.[2]
In April 1976, after Pope Paul VI had
condemned homosexuality in a homily, Peyrefitte
accused him of being a closet
homosexual. [3]
In Les Ambassades (1951), he revealed the ins and outs
of diplomacy. Peyrefitte also wrote a book full of gossip about
Baron Jacques d'Adelswärd-Fersen's
exile in Capri (L'Exilé de
Capri, 1959) and translated Greek gay love poetry (La Muse
garçonnière (The Boyish Muse), Flammarion, 1973).
In his memoirs Propos Secrets, he wrote extensively
about his youth, his sex life (homosexual mainly and a
few affairs with women), his years as a diplomat, his travels to
Greece and Italy [4] and his
troubles with the police for sexually harassing male teenagers. He
also gave vent to his fierce love of snobbish genealogizing and vitriolic well-documented
gossip, writing about famous people of his time such as André Gide, Henry de
Montherlant, Jean
Cocteau, Jean
Genet, Marcel Jouhandeau, Marie-Laure de Noailles, Gaston
Gallimard, Jean Paul Sartre, Charles de
Gaulle and Georges Pompidou, among many others.
Claiming he had reliable sources within the Vatican's "black
aristocracy", once again he stated that three recent popes of the
20th century were homosexuals. He particularly loved to expose the
hypocrisy and vanity of prominent people, to
denounce fake aristocrats and to out closet
homosexuals.
Roger Peyrefitte wrote popular historical biographies about Alexander
the Great and Voltaire. In Voltaire et Frédéric II
he polemically claimed that Voltaire had been the passive lover of Frederick the Great.
In spite of his libertarian views on sexuality, politically
Peyrefitte was a conservative bourgeois and in his
later years he would support extreme right-winger Jean-Marie Le
Pen.[5]
He died at 93 of Parkinson's disease, after
receiving the last rites from the Church he had attacked
so strongly.
Legacy
|
I am the most well-known defender of homosexual rights in
France. That is certain. Often they call me 'The Pope of
Homosexuality.' That's because I am the author of The Keys of
St. Peter and The Knights of Malta, the most
important books by a contemporary writer on the Catholic
Church.
—— Interview to the Gay Sunshine
Journal (1979)
|
After his death, the city of Capri dedicated a plaque to him
which is mounted near Villa Lysis and the inscription of which
reads: A Roger Peyrefitte autore de L'esule di Capri per aver
esaltato e diffuso il mito, la cultura e la bellezza dell'isola nel
mondo. — "For Roger Peyrefitte, author of L'Exile de
Capri, for having exalted and diffused the myth, the culture,
and the beauty of this island in the world." [1]
Press
cuttings
|
I love the lambs, not the sheep. (J'aime les agneaux, pas les
moutons!)
—Roger Peyrefitte
|
- Obituary in The
Times, 7 November 2000, page 25. "In the minds of many,
Roger Peyrefitte's reputation as a genuinely literary novelist is
based on one novel. Les Amitiés Particulières (1944), which was
also his first. He wrote many others, but none really matched the
merit of the
first, and the author seemed increasingly to seek a succès
de scandale rather than any serious critical
consideration."
- Obituary by James
Kirkup in The Independent: The Tuesday
Review, 7 November 2000, page 6. "Peyrefitte was a skilled
manipulator of the media. He was charismatic to the point of
absurdity, with his dramatic gestures and outrageous behaviour, so
that in the end no one took any notice of his often ludicrous
fabrications, though they were always delivered with great style
and conviction, and with an effrontery that was amusingly
malicious. {...} Peyrefitte acknowledges the courage of his great
predecessors Andre Gide, Marcel Proust, Jean Cocteau and Oscar Wilde, while regretting the timidity
of Marcel
Jouhandeau and many of the contemporary French writers, whether
gay or straight, in pursuing the cause of homosexual (and
heterosexual) rights."
- Obituary by Douglas Johnson in The Guardian, 15 November 2000, page
24. "André Gide, who had attempted to defend homosexuality in a
much earlier work, was prophetic in his congratulations to
Peyrefitte. He did not think that Les Amitiés
Particulières would win the Goncourt prize, but he did believe
it would still be read a century later."
Bibliography
- Les Amitiés
particulières, novel, Editions Flammarion 1944 (English
translation: ISBN 0-914301-23-3)
- Mademoiselle de Murville, novel, Editions Jean Vigneau
1947
- Le Prince des neiges, drama in 3 acts, Editions Jean
Vigneau 1947
- L'Oracle, novel, Editions Jean Vigneau 1948
(definitive edition 1974)
- Les Amours singulières, novel, Editions Jean Vigneau
1949
- La Mort d'une mère, Editions Flammarion 1950
- Les Ambassades, novel, Editions Flammarion 1951
- Les Œuvres libres - Roger Peyrefitte, etc. Editions
Arthème Fayard 1951
- Du Vésuve à l'Etna, short story, Editions Flammarion
1952
- La Fin des ambassades, novel, Editions Flammarion 1953
(English translation: ISBN 0-436-36900-1)
- Les Amours, de Lucien de Samosate (translation of the
original Greek), Editions Flammarion 1954
- Les Clés de saint Pierre, novel, Editions Flammarion
1955
- Jeunes Proies, Editions Flammarion 1956
- Les Chevaliers de Malte, Editions Flammarion 1957
(English translation: ISBN 0-87599-087-8)
- L'Exilé de Capri, Editions Flammarion 1959
- Le Spectateur nocturne, dramatic dialogue, Editions
Flammarion 1960
- Les Fils de la lumière, study of Free-Masonry,
Editions Flammarion 1961
- La Nature du Prince, Editions Flammarion 1963
- Les Secrets des conclaves, Editions Flammarion
1964
- Les Juifs, Editions Flammarion 1965 (English
translation: ISBN 0-436-36903-6)
- Notre Amour, Editions Flammarion 1967
- Les Américains, novel, Editions Flammarion 1968
- Des Français, novel, Editions Flammarion 1970
- La Coloquinte, novel, Editions Flammarion 1971
- Manouche, short story, Editions Flammarion 1972
(English translation: ISBN 0-8021-0046-5)
- L'Enfant Amour, essay, Editions Flammarion 1972
- Un Musée de l'Amour, photographs of his collection of
pederastic art by Marianne Haas, Editions du Rocher 1972
- La Muse Garçonnière, (Musa Paidika)
translated of the original Greek, Editions Flammarion 1973
- Tableaux de chasse, ou la vie extraordinaire de Fernand
Legros, Editions Albin Michel 1976
- Propos secrets, memoirs, Editions Albin Michel
1977
- Trilogy about Alexander the Great - Editions Albin Michel
- La Jeunesse d'Alexandre, 1977
- Les Conquêtes d'Alexandre, 1979
- Alexandre le Grand, 1981
- Propos secrets 2, memoirs, Editions Albin Michel
1980
- L'Enfant de cœur, Editions Albin Michel 1978
- Roy, novel, Editions Albin Michel 1979
- L'Illustre écrivain, Editions Albin Michel 1982
- Henry de
Montherlant - Roger Peyrefitte - Correspondance
(1938-1941), presentation and notes by R. Peyrefitte
and Pierre Sipriot, Editions Robert Laffont 1983
- La Soutane rouge, Edition du Mercure de France
1983
- Doucet Louis, raconté par... photographs by Rosine
Mazin, Editions Sun 1985
- Voltaire, sa
jeunesse et son temps, biography, Editions Albin Michel
1985
- L' Innominato: Nouveaux Propos Secrets, memoirs,
Editions Albin Michel 1989
- Voltaire et Frédéric II, Editions Albin Michel
1992
- Réflexions sur De Gaulle, Paris, Editions
régionales 1991
- Le Dernier des Sivry, novel, Editions du Rocher,
Monaco 1993
- Retours en Sicile, Editions du Rocher, Monaco
1996
References
- ^
R. Peyrefitte, Propos secrets, 1977, pp. 285-289 ;
L'Enfant de cœur, 1978, pp. 9 and 29.
- ^ Sibalis, Michael D. (2006), "Peyrefitte, Roger",
glbtq.com, http://www.glbtq.com/literature/peyrefitte_r.html, retrieved
2008-02-03
- ^
Paul VI's Homosexuality:
Rumor or Reality? by Marian T. Horvat
- ^
Making such polemic statements as that the majority of Italian men
were bisexual and that heterosexual anal sex was commonplace,
much to the joy of Italian women and particularly as a birth control
method.
- ^
Article on Roger Peyrefitte at
the GLBTQ Encyclopedia
External
links