Christophe Bourseiller
Christophe Bourseiller, born Christophe Gintzburger on September 27, 1957, is a multifaceted French actor, author, journalist, and freemason. He launched his career in the arts at a young age, making his film debut in the classic 1962 movie *War of the Buttons*, directed by Yves Robert. Over the years, he has collaborated with notable directors such as Jean-Luc Godard and Claude Lelouch, accumulating credits in around thirty films and numerous stage productions throughout the late 1970s, early 1980s, and again in the mid-2000s.
Bourseiller, whose family has deep ties to the arts—his father was playwright André Gintzburger and his mother, actress Chantal Darget—pursued a parallel career in writing and journalism. He has authored thirty books covering a broad spectrum of subjects, including political extremism and the cultural movements of the 1980s. Notably, he explored the French Maoist movement in his 1996 work, *The Maoists: The Folle History of the French Red Guards*.
In addition to his writing, Bourseiller has made significant contributions to radio and television. He founded the free radio station Frequency Arts in 1981 and later co-produced *Electromania* on France Musique. He served as an editorial advisor on the program *Ce soir (ou jamais!)* until 2011 and appeared on the historical program *L'Ombre d'un Doubt*.
Since 2003, he has been teaching at the Institut d'Études Politiques in Paris and is currently working on a PhD thesis focused on French collaborationist movements. Bourseiller is also a passionate collector of political leaflets and propaganda, having donated a substantial collection to the Institute of Social History in Amsterdam. In recent years, he has continued to engage with audiences through various media platforms, including a column on *La Bande