Dove Attia

Dove Attia
Born (1957-06-08) 8 June 1957
Tunis, Tunisia
Nationality French
Education École Polytechnique
Occupation Music producer

Jules Dove Attia (Arabic: جول دوف عطية) better known as Dove Attia (born in Tunisia on 8 June 1957) is a musical producer television personality.

Beginnings

Dove Attia is a French citizen born to a Tunisian father who was an electrician and a French mother. At 15 he studied guitar and tried his had in composition and singing, particularly rock music and dreaming on a music career and formed his own school band with some of his schoolmates. After getting his baccalaureate, he established in Paris where he studied at Lycée Chaptal and mathematics at Lycée Saint-Louis and continuing to l'École polytechnique and finally a Master of Advanced Studies (DEA) at Université Paris-Dauphine.[1] After graduation, he taught mathematics, physics and chemistry at Lycée Chaptal where he had studied. And starting 1990, he prepared students at the lycée for placement in various higher education institutions.[1]

Career

Always having artistic aspirations, he worked in the early 1990s as an author and a journalist preparing in collaboration with Léon Zitrone a collection of documentary videos about the most important events of the 20th century. In 1996, he also co-wrote with Albert Cohen a biographical book La légende du 100m: Un siècle pour une seconde a biography of runner Carl Lewis. He held high administrative positions as General Director of the main French television station TF1's international operations, and later as president of Tekelec Europe, provider of electronic products.

Dove Attia then moved on to cowrite with Lambert Vincent the scenario for the Didier Delaître long feature television film Passion assasine. The film was produced by 7 Films (a production company run by Elie Chouraqui and Alain Cohen). Passion assasine was broadcast on M6 television station in 2000.

He found his niche in musical comedy with the production of a number of high-profile French musicals. In 2000, he produced Les Dix Commandements in collaboration with friend and associate Albert Cohen and Elie Chouraqui. It was a massive commercial success. he was producer of the musical Autant en emporte le vent (2003), Les Hors-la-Loi (2005), Le Roi Soleil (2005) and Mozart, l'opéra rock (2009)[2] 1789: Les Amants de la Bastille (2012), La légende du Roi Arthur (2015).

In popular culture

Starting 2003, he was part of the jury of television reality series À la Recherche de la Nouvelle Star on M6 with Varda Kakon, Lionel Florence and André Manoukian. He came back for future seasons with the program being renamed Nouvelle Star and when Marianne James replaced Varda Kakon and Manu Katché, who replaced Lionel Florence. He quit the program in 2007.

Productions

List of best-known productions or co=productions:

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/3/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.