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Born · November 14, 1963 (61 years old)
Known For: Acting
Place of Birth: Lyon, Rhône, France
Stéphane Bern (born 14 November 1963) is a French-Luxembourgish journalist, radio host and television presenter. He is known as a specialist in nobility and royalty. He has been awarded honours by several nations, including the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres (France), the Order of Grimaldi (Monaco), and the Order of the British Empire (United Kingdom). Bern went to high school at Lycée Carnot in Paris, and he graduated from the École de management de Lyon in 1985. His parents, Melita Schlanger and Louis Bern, were born to Polish parents of Jewish families who had emigrated to Switzerland and France, before WW2. He came out in the magazine Têtu in October 2009 and in the documentary "Vie privée, vie publique" (by Mireille Dumas), which aired on France 3 on 6 November 2009. Bern was editor of the magazine Dynasty from 1985 to 1987, and then worked as a journalist for Jours de France in 1988. Since 1999, he has been the deputy editor (Events section) of the magazine Le Figaro Madame. Bern chronicled various royal families on Europe 1 from 1992 to 1997 before joining Radio Télévision Luxembourg and participating in the show Les Grosses Têtes. Since 2000, he has produced and hosted the show Le Fou du roi on France Inter, which is the most listened-to show in France during this time slot. He hosts Historiquement Vôtre with Mathieu Noël on Europe 1 since September 2020. He was a member of the Nouvelle Action Royaliste political movement for 18 years, but left in 1999. He was alderman of the 9th arrondissement of Paris from 1999 to 2001, then President of the Conservatory of Music of that area. A member since its inception in January 2001 of the Academy Grevin, he inaugurated the Grevin Wax Museum on 10 March 2008. Bern is also a member of the Cercle de l'Union interalliée and the Institute of the Royal House of France, and a sponsor of the Youth Club of that institute. He was appointed by President Emmanuel Macron to raise funds for the national heritage. Bern criticised the demolition of the historic Saint-Joseph Chapel of Saint-Paul College in Lille. Source: Article "Stéphane Bern" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Self
0.0
2024
Self
0.0
2024
(voice)
3.0
2024
Self
0.0
2024
Self · (4 episodes)
0.0
2024
0.0
2023
Présentateur
0.0
2023
Présentateur
0.0
2023
Narrator
9.0
2023
Himself
4.1
2023
0.0
2023
Narrateur
8.0
2023
Self · (1 episode)
0.0
2023
Antoine Bellefond · (4 episodes)
8.0
2022
Self - Guest · (1 episode)
0.0
2022
0.0
2021
Narrateur · (52 episodes)
8.5
2021
Présentateur TV
7.0
2021
Commandant Paul Leclerc
5.6
2020
Self - Narrator
8.0
2020
Présentateur · (4 episodes)
0.0
2020
0.0
2020
Self
0.0
2020
Self
0.0
2020
Self - Host
6.0
2020
Self · (1 episode)
6.7
2020
Présentateur
0.0
2019
Self - Host
0.0
2018
Orphée · (90 episodes)
0.0
2018
Présentateur
0.0
2018
Himself - Presenter · (11 episodes)
0.0
2018
Self
4.7
2018
Stéphane Bern
10.0
2018
himself - presenter · (4 episodes)
0.0
2018
Julien Quignard · (1 episode)
6.4
2017
Self - Host
0.0
2017
Self - Guest · (1 episode)
0.0
2017
Self
0.0
2016
Présentateur
0.0
2015
Présentateur
0.0
2015
Stéphane Bern
0.0
2015
Presenter
0.0
2015
Lui même
5.8
2015
Agent immobilier
6.2
2014
Présentateur
0.0
2014
Presenter
0.0
2014
Présentateur
0.0
2014
Self · (1 episode)
0.0
2013
Nicolas Muller · (1 episode)
7.2
2013
Self · (1 episode)
8.5
2012
Présentateur
0.0
2012
Host · (9 episodes)
0.0
2012
Christophe · (1 episode)
4.7
2012
Self (uncredited)
4.9
2012
Louis II de Bavière
0.0
2011
lui-même · (6 episodes)
0.0
2011
Self - Guest · (2 episodes)
6.0
2009
Self
0.0
2008
Self · (1 episode)
6.4
2008
Self · (1 episode)
7.5
2008
Himself Presenter · (188 episodes)
7.9
2007
Self - Guest · (2 episodes)
3.5
2006
Himself
4.5
2006
Jean-Edouard Bernel, spécialiste des têtes couronnées
0.0
2006
(1 episode)
10.0
2003
self-host · (272 episodes)
0.0
2003
Stéphane Bern
5.0
2001
Self
0.0
1999
Self · (3 episodes)
3.2
1998
Self · (2 episodes)
2.0
1985
Self · (1 episode)
5.8
1976
(0 episode)
0.0