
Personal Info
Known For
Writing
Born
June 22, 1923
Died
April 24, 2004 (age 80)
Place of Birth
Paris, France
Also Known As
Jose Giovanni
Joseph Damiani
José Giovanni
Biography
José Giovanni (22 June 1923, Paris, France – 24 April 2004, Lausanne, Switzerland) was the pseudonym of Joseph Damiani, a French writer and film-maker of Corsican origin who became a naturalized Swiss citizen in 1986.
A former collaborationist and criminal who at one time was sentenced to death, Giovanni often drew his inspiration from personal experience or from real gangsters, such as Abel Danos in his 1960 film Classe tous risques, overlooking that they had been members of the French Gestapo. In his films as well as his novels, while praising masculine friendships and advocating the confrontation of the individual against the world, he often championed the underworld but was always careful to hide his own links with the Nazi occupiers of France during World War II.
Of Corsican descent, Joseph Damiani received a good education, studying at the Collège Stanislas de Paris and the Lycée Janson de Sailly. His father, a professional gambler who was sentenced to a year in prison for running an illegal casino, owned a hotel in the French Alps in Chamonix. Joseph worked there as a young man and became fascinated by mountain climbing.
From April to September 1943 Damiani was a member of Jeunesse et Montagne (Youth and Mountain) in Chamonix, part of the Vichy Government youth movement controlled by Pierre Laval.
In February 1944 Damiani came to Paris and through his father's friend, the LVF leader Simon Sabiani, he joined Jacques Doriot's fascist French Popular Party (PPF). His maternal uncle, Ange Paul Santolini alias "Santos", who ran a restaurant patronized by the Gestapo, and his elder brother, Paul Damiani, a member of the Vichy paramilitary Milice, introduced Joseph into the Pigalle underworld.
In March 1944 Joseph Damiani went to Marseille where he became a member of the German Schutzkorps (SK), an organization which hunted down Service du travail obligatoire - STO (Compulsory Work Service) dodgers. He served as bodyguard to its Marseille chief and took part in many arrests, often blackmailing his victims.
In Lyon, in August 1944, posing as a German police officer along with an accomplice (Orloff, a Gestapo agent who was shot for treason at the Liberation), Damiani blackmailed Joseph Gourentzeig and his brother-in-law Georges Edberg, two Jews who were in hiding. Gourentzeig had bribed a member of the Milice - a friend of Damiani’s – in an attempt to secure his parents' release from a detention camp. They were not freed and Gourentzeig's father, Jacob, was shot by the Germans shortly after, on 21 August 1944, along with 109 Jewish hostages in the Bron (Lyon airport) massacre.
After the Liberation in Paris on 18 May 1945, Joseph Damiani, his brother Paul, Georges Accad, a former Gestapo agent, and Jacques Ménassole, a former member of the Milice wearing a French Army lieutenant's uniform - all posing as Military Intelligence officers - abducted Haïm Cohen, a wine merchant, accusing him of being a black marketeer. He was tortured until he gave them the key to his safe and a check for 105,000 francs. He was then shot and his body thrown into the Seine. Joseph Damiani cashed the check at Barclay's Bank under the identity of "Count J. de Montreuil". ...
Source: Article "José Giovanni" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Known For

TV
Vivement dimanche
Self
1998

TV
Spécial cinéma
Self
1974

TV
Champs-Elysées
Self
1982

TV
Les Rendez-vous du dimanche
Self
1975

TV
30 millions d'amis
Self
1976

Film
Symphony for a Massacre
Moreau
1963

Film
Lino Ventura, la part intime
Self (archive footage)
2018

Film
Michel Audiard et le mystère du triangle des Bermudes
Self
2002

Film
Claude Sautet or the Invisible Magic
Self
2003
Filmography
2018FilmLino Ventura, la part intimeas Self (archive footage)2003FilmClaude Sautet or the Invisible Magicas Self2002FilmMichel Audiard et le mystère du triangle des Bermudesas Self1998TVVivement dimancheas Self1982TVChamps-Elyséesas Self1976TV30 millions d'amisas Self1975TVLes Rendez-vous du dimancheas Self1974TVSpécial cinémaas Self1963FilmSymphony for a Massacreas Moreau