Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Alexandre Stavisky was a Russian Jew born in modern-day Ukraine, whose parents had moved to France. Career. Stavisky tried various professions, working as a café singer, as a nightclub manager, as a worker in a soup factory, and as the operator of a gambling den. He received French citizenship in 1910.

  2. Alexandre Stavisky Police Magazine 14 January 1934. The Stavisky affair was a financial scandal in France in 1934, involving embezzler Alexandre Stavisky.The scandal had political ramifications for the Radical-Socialist government after it was revealed that Prime Minister Camille Chautemps had protected Stavisky, who died suddenly in mysterious circumstances.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › StaviskyStavisky - Wikipedia

    Box office. $7.6 million [1] Stavisky... is a 1974 French biographical drama film based on the life of the financier and embezzler Alexandre Stavisky and the circumstances leading to his mysterious death in 1934. This gave rise to a political scandal known as the Stavisky Affair, which led to fatal riots in Paris, the resignation of two prime ...

  4. Stavisky affair, French financial scandal of 1933 that, by triggering right-wing agitation, resulted in a major crisis in the history of the Third Republic (1870–1940). The scandal came to light in December 1933 when the bonds of a credit organization in Bayonne, founded by the financier Alexandre.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. May 15, 1974 · Stavisky: Directed by Alain Resnais. With Jean-Paul Belmondo, François Périer, Anny Duperey, Michael Lonsdale. A swindler's activity indirectly caused a political crisis in France in the last years before World War II.

    • (2.4K)
    • Biography, Crime, Drama
    • Alain Resnais
    • 1974-05-15
  6. People also ask

  7. STAVISKY AFFAIR.BIBLIOGRAPHYIn 1934 a resounding scandal shook the already-contested regime of interwar France, the ThirdRepublic, toitsfoundations. The Stavisky affair combined the financial scams of a swindler and his accomplices, the weaknesses and susceptibilities of government regulators and elected representatives, the perversion of a free press, and a violent explosion of popular anger ...

  8. The Stavisky Scandal. March 1934 Issue. THE American reader must realize that the Stavisky Scandal involves matters of much deeper consequence than its surface facts reveal. Incredible as it seems ...

  1. People also search for