Chevalier, Haakon Maurice

Male


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  • Name Chevalier, Haakon Maurice 
    Gender Male 
    Related to my family
    _UID 7B84D9CE3F454332A11599806D3C29BCFC32 
    Person ID I5490  Buyer, Stier and Related Families
    Last Modified 12 Jun 2005 

    Family Landsburgh, Barbara Ethel,   d. 14 Jul 2003 
    _UID 2AAB347CDB2F49A080C245AF0E8B6A30E1C0 
    Children 
     1. (Private)
     2. (Private)
    Last Modified 3 Mar 2019 
    Family ID F1899  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • Source: Contemporary Authors Online, Gale, 2002.

      PERSONAL INFORMATION
      Family: Born September 10, 1902, in Lakewood, NJ; died July 4, 1985, in Paris, France; son of Emile and Therese Chevalier; married Ruth Bosley, 1922 ; married Barbara Lansburgh, 1931 ; married Carol Lansburgh, 1952; children: Jacques Anatole; Suzanne Andree, Haakon Lazarus; Karen Anne. Education: Student, Stanford University, 1918-20; University of California, A.B., 1923, A.M., 1925, Ph.D., 1929.

      Memberships: P.E.N., Authors League of America, Association Internationale des Interpretes de Conference, Association des Traducteurs Litteraires de France.

      CAREER
      University of California, Berkeley, Calif, professor of French, 1929-46; French interpreter, United Nations Conference, San Francisco, CA, 1945, War Criminals Trials, Nuremberg, West Germany, 1945-46, United Nations, Lake Success, NY, 1946; full-time translator and author, beginning 1946.
      WRITINGS BY THE AUTHOR:
      The Ironic Temper: Anatole France and His Time, Oxford University Press, 1932.
      For Us the Living, Knopf, 1949.
      The Man Who Would be God, Putnam, 1959.
      Oppenheimer: The Story of a Friendship, Braziller, 1965.
      The Last Voyage of the Schooner Rosamond, Deutsch, 1970.
      Translator:
      Andre Malraux, Man's Fate, Smith & Haas, 1934, reissued, Random House, 1961, 1968.
      Malraux, Days of Wrath, Random House, 1936, McGraw, 1964.
      Louis Aragon, The Bells of Basel, Harcourt, 1936.
      Aragon, Residential Quarter, Harcourt, 1938.
      Salvador Dali, The Secret Life of Salvador Dali, Dial, 1942, 3rd edition, Vision Press, 1968.
      Vladimir Pozner, The Edge of the Sword, Modern Age Books, 1942.
      Pozner, First Harvest, Viking, 1943.
      Gontran de Poncins, Home is the Hunter, Reynal & Hitchcock, 1943.
      Andre Maurois, Seven Faces of Love, Didier, 1944, reissued, Doubleday, 1962.
      Dali, Hidden Faces, Dial, 1944.
      Joseph Kessel, Army of Shadows, Knopf, 1944.
      Denis de Rougemont, Devil's Share, Pantheon, 1944, published as The Devil's Share: An Essay on the Diabolic in Modern Society, Meridian Books, 1956.
      Maurois, Franklin: The Life of an Optimist, Didier, 1945.
      Vercors, Three Short Novels by Vercors, Little, Brown, 1947.
      Simon Gantillon, Vessel of Wrath, Putnam, 1947.
      Dali, 50 Secrets of Magic Craftsmanship, Dial, 1948.
      Dali, Dali on Modern Art: The Cuckolds of Antiquated Modern Art, Dial, 1957.
      Stendhal, A Roman Journal, Orion Press, 1957.
      Rene Grousset, Chinese Art and Culture, Orion Press, 1959.
      Michel Seuphor, The Sculpture of this Century: Dictionary of Modern Sculpture, Zwemmer, 1959, published as The Sculpture of This Century, Braziller, 1960.
      Louis Aragon, Holy Week, Putnam, 1961.
      Seuphor, Abstract Painting: Fifty Years of Accomplishment, From Kandinsky to the Present, Abrams, 1962 .
      Henri Mixchaux, Light Through Darkness, Orion Press, 1963, published as Light Through Darkness: Explorations among Drugs, Bodley Head, 1964.
      Seuphor, Abstract Painting in Flanders, Arcade , 1963.
      Robert Descharnes and Jean-Francois Chabrun, Auguste Rodin, Macmillan, 1968.
      Bob Claessens and Jeanne Rousseau, Our Breugel, Fond Mercator, 1969.
      Pierre Galante, Malraux, Cowles, 1971.
      Jerzy Szablowski, Sophie Schneebalg-Perelman, and Adelbrecht L.J. van de Walle, The Flemish Tapestries at Wawel Castle in Cracow: Treasures of King Sigismund Augustus Jagiello, Fond Mercator , 1972.
      Contributor to various magazines.
      FURTHER READINGS ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
      PERIODICALS
      The New York Review of Books, July 2, 1970.


      OBITUARY NOTICE
      Born September 10, 1901, in Lakewood, NJ; died July 4, 1985, in Paris, France. Educator, translator, and author. Chevalier was a professor of French at the University of California, Berkeley, from 1929 until 1946, when he resigned under political pressure. In 1942 Chevalier was reportedly asked by George Charles Eltenton to obtain details, presumably for the Soviets, of secret atomic research then being conducted at Berkeley's radiation laboratories. Chevalier allegedly approached his friend, nuclear scientist J. Robert Oppenheimer, with the proposal, but was rebuffed by Oppenheimer, who termed the scheme "treasonable." Oppenheimer's delay in reporting the incident was to later contribute to his own difficulties in obtaining security clearances vital to his work. The revelation resulted in Chevalier's becoming one of the first persons to be investigated by the House Un-American Activities Committee. Though Oppenheimer later withdrew his allegation, Chevalier was subsequently pressured to resign from his teaching post. He then worked as a translator for the United Nations for several years before moving to France in 1950. Chevalier translated numerous books, including Andre Malraux's Man's Fate, Louis Aragon's The Bells of Basel, and Salvador Dali's The Secret Life of Salvador Dali. He was also the author of several novels, including For Us the Living and The Man Who Would Be God, and a 1965 memoir, Oppenheimer: The Story of a Friendship.