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Fernand Auberjonois

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Fernand Auberjonois Veteran

Birth
Valeyres-sous-Ursins, District du Jura-Nord vaudois, Vaud, Switzerland
Death
27 Aug 2004 (aged 93)
Cork, County Cork, Ireland
Burial
Cremated. Specifically: Disposition of remains following cremation withheld at request of family. Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Fernand Auberjonois was the son of Augusta Grenier and René Auberjonois, one of Switzerland's best-known post-Impressionist painters, and his wife, Augusta Grenier. He was married in November 1939 to Princess Laure Louise Napoléone Eugénie Caroline Murat, a descendant of Napoleon Bonaparte's sister, Caroline, and her husband, Joachim Murat, King of Naples and King of Sicily. Their son, actor René Auberjonois, was born in 1940.

He enlisted in the U.S. Army during World War II and served on secret assignments, including setting up radio transmissions for the Allies to divert the German's attention from the real invasion site on D-Day. He worked for many print organizations, as well as for NBC and Voice of America, following World War II and into the Cold War period. He worked as the foreign correspondent of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and the Toledo Blade. Auberjonois was one of the most admired American reporters based in London throughout most of the Cold War.Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA) - August 28, 2004
Deceased Name: FERNAND AUBERJONOIS MUCH ADMIRED FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT

WHO LIVED A CHRONICLE OF 20TH CENTURY
Fernand Auberjonois, the highly respected foreign correspondent of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and The Toledo Blade, died yesterday in Cork, Ireland. He was 93.

Throughout most of the Cold War, Mr. Auberjonois was one of the most admired American reporters in London. From 1956 until his formal retirement in 1983, and sometimes even after that, he covered many of the world's biggest news stories, sometimes traveling as many as 50,000 miles a year.

He was in Berlin when the infamous wall went up in 1961, and was still writing occasional features and commentary for The Blade when the wall crashed down in 1989. He covered summit conferences, roamed throughout Europe and Asia on special assignments, and helped explain an increasingly complex world to hundreds of thousands of readers.

Mr. Auberjonois' assignments ranged from traveling by mule through Afghanistan's Khyber Pass to covering the Algerian crisis in 1958 to meeting the queen at Buckingham Palace.

He was admired and respected by generations of reporters, many of whom also became personal friends. "Fernand was well-liked and highly respected, and couldn't have been more gracious," said Curt Prendergast, Time magazine's London bureau chief from 1968 to 1973.

"In his great way, he was the most wonderfully debonair foreign correspondent," said R.W. "Johnny" Apple Jr., former London correspondent for The New York Times.

Though Mr. Auberjonois won the Overseas Press Club award and was nominated several times for a Pulitzer Prize, his written journalism was only a small part of his measure.

"I really admire his modesty, given what a remarkable life he's had," said Dan Pedersen, who covered London for Newsweek from 1989 to 1997. "He was the global man before globalization."

Though he was regarded by both publishers for whom he worked, Paul Block Jr. and his son, John Robinson Block, as perhaps the best writer The Blade ever had, he preferred in retirement to write a series of novels, essays and memoirs in a very elegant French, his native language.

"He was the consummate journalist,'' said John Robinson Block, now publisher and editor-in-chief of the Post-Gazette and The Blade.

"Today there are swarms of reporters and boys on the bus. He was something different. He dug well below the surface while others were superficial. He was a master."

While he lived in Europe for most of his life, Mr. Auberjonois was a proud naturalized American citizen and a distinguished hero of World War II who won medals from not only the United States, but France and Poland as well. He broadcast before and during the war to Nazi-occupied France, and when the war ended, helped launch the French-language service of the Voice of America.

Later, he was summoned to appear before Sen. Joseph McCarthy's famous red-hunting committee and spent three hours being grilled by McCarthy and his aides, who were looking for communist subversion at the VOA in March 1953. They didn't find any, and Mr. Auberjonois was promptly and totally cleared by his agency.

Born in the small town of Jouxtens, just outside of Lausanne, Switzerland, he was the son of Rene Auberjonois (1872-1957), one of Switzerland's best-known post-impressionist painters, and grew up in a world in which celebrities, including Igor Stravinsky, were regulars at the family dinner table.

After earning a degree in geology, he crossed the Atlantic and arrived in New York on Aug. 28, 1933. That was in the depths of the Great Depression, but it wasn't enough to prevent him from falling instantly in love with America.

He worked for a time as Katherine Hepburn's private French tutor before joining the French news agency Havas. In 1937, he left to become the first host of L'Heure Francaise, NBC radio's first regular trans-Atlantic broadcast. The service continued after the fall of France, and Mr. Auberjonois was soon asked to join the fight against the Nazis by joining the Military Intelligence Service.

There was no reason that he would have had to fight at all. As a Swiss citizen, he could have kept his neutral status throughout the war. He was newly married, and by the time of Pearl Harbor was supporting a wife, Laura, two infant sons and two young stepdaughters.

Nevertheless, Mr. Auberjonois enlisted and was sent to a top-secret training camp in Canada that was run by the British intelligence service. He went on from there to a variety of missions, including stints as top aides to both Gens. George Patton and Dwight D. Eisenhower. He set up allied radio operations in North Africa and helped weave a web of deception to fool the Germans about where the D-Day landings would occur. He also broadcast allied propaganda to French-speaking Europe.

Several times, he went on secret missions behind enemy lines, where he led teams of men who were trained to blow up railway installations. He was given a cyanide capsule before each mission and advised to commit suicide if captured, to avoid torture and certain death.

Two days after D-Day, he managed to publish La Presse Cherbourgeoise, the first free newspaper of liberated France. Following the war, then-Maj. Auberjonois was awarded the U.S. Legion of Merit, France's Croix de Guerre with four citations, and Poland's Polonia Restituta. France eventually made him a chevalier of the Legion of Honor, roughly equivalent to a knighthood.

Following the war, he did a stint as publishing director for new editions of Time and Life in Europe before returning to New York to work first for NBC and then Voice of America.

Following his brush with McCarthy, he vowed never to work for the government again. Instead, he helped co-found the international public relations arm of Hill and Knowlton International. He was handling public relations for the Suez Canal Co. in the summer of 1956 when he got a call from Paul Block Jr., who had heard of Mr. Auberjonois from a mutual friend.

Mr. Block was looking for the right man to represent The Blade in Europe. Mr. Auberjonois was intrigued, but said he was reluctant to write for an audience he didn't know.

"But Paul said, 'Come to Toledo and find out who we are.' And in fact he took me personally on a guided tour of his city and northwestern Ohio. It was a fascinating experience, and we found that we shared many interests,'' he later said, adding, "I found that I liked Toledo and the Toledoans very much."

It was very rare for any but the largest papers to have their own foreign correspondents, but Paul Block felt it was essential for The Blade to have its own man reporting from what was widely regarded as center stage in the ongoing world superpower struggle.

Though he covered the big stories superbly, often interviewing participants in their own languages, whether French, German, English, Spanish or Italian, Mr. Auberjonois was perhaps at his best at writing fascinating feature stories that illustrated what life was like in divided Berlin, post-modern London or strife-torn Belfast. He said he often regarded his stories as letters written to his good friend Paul Block in Toledo, explaining the situation in Europe or elsewhere.

Mr. Auberjonois initially disagreed with his employer over where the bureau should be located. To avoid getting bogged down in the details of French politics, Mr. Auberjonois successfully argued that he should report from London, where it would be easier to keep up with developments that would have wide appeal to an American audience.

Paul Block, a passionate Francophile, would have preferred Paris, but reluctantly agreed.

His byline originally was "Fernand Fauber." It was feared "Auberjonois" would be too much of a mouthful for Midwesterners. That lasted for a few years, until the writer persuaded his editors "to give me my identity back.''

Throughout his career, he insisted on a high standard for news coverage.

"There was a great change in the news business in his life, mainly, the rise of entertainment values and the decline of serious news. Fernand resisted that as well as he could,'' Newsweek's Pedersen said. "He believed this was a serious business, though he also knew that it was important to observe and write with a sense of humor.''

His legendary sense of humor often helped himself and his colleagues maintain grace under pressure. During one particularly harrowing point when they were both covering the fighting between Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland, Time's Prendergast asked Mr. Auberjonois how he could possibly tell members of the two religions apart. "Oh, the Catholics have sweeter faces,'' he replied.

By the 1980s, he had settled in as the dean of American correspondents in London, whose advice was often sought by those who made pilgrimages to the Reform Club, his favorite after-hours haunt. But he remained a working journalist. "He was a colleague, not a father figure," Pedersen remembered. "He would be very helpful to younger correspondents, if he thought they were serious about news."

In his later years as a correspondent, Mr. Auberjonois found to his pride that his son, actor Rene Auberjonois, was rapidly becoming more famous than he. Though the younger Auberjonois preferred the stage, he became widely known thanks to two starring roles in popular TV series, "Benson" and "Star Trek: Deep Space Nine."

Though he formally retired in 1983, Mr. Auberjonois continued to contribute freelance features and an occasional news story to The Blade and the Post-Gazette until well into the 1990s. But he spent most of his time writing a series of well-received books in his native French, including two volumes of memoirs, "Entre Deux Mondes" (Between Two Worlds) and "L'Air d'Ailleurs" (Notes from Elsewhere), and "De Chittagong a Cork," which included stories about his ancestors.

Both books sold very well in Switzerland, where the first topped the best-seller lists for weeks. He wrote only one book in English, "Top Dog" (1980), which was allegedly penned by his beloved King Charles Cavalier spaniel, McMuck, and which was illustrated with Mr. Auberjonois' whimsical drawings; he was an accomplished amateur painter.

Besides Rene, he is survived by his wife, Helga, whom he married in 1968, his son, Michael, of Houston, Texas; a daughter, Anne, of New York City; and two stepdaughters, Ghislaine Vautier and Marie-Laure Degener.

The body will be cremated. The funeral will be held in his native Switzerland at a later date.
Fernand Auberjonois was the son of Augusta Grenier and René Auberjonois, one of Switzerland's best-known post-Impressionist painters, and his wife, Augusta Grenier. He was married in November 1939 to Princess Laure Louise Napoléone Eugénie Caroline Murat, a descendant of Napoleon Bonaparte's sister, Caroline, and her husband, Joachim Murat, King of Naples and King of Sicily. Their son, actor René Auberjonois, was born in 1940.

He enlisted in the U.S. Army during World War II and served on secret assignments, including setting up radio transmissions for the Allies to divert the German's attention from the real invasion site on D-Day. He worked for many print organizations, as well as for NBC and Voice of America, following World War II and into the Cold War period. He worked as the foreign correspondent of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and the Toledo Blade. Auberjonois was one of the most admired American reporters based in London throughout most of the Cold War.Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA) - August 28, 2004
Deceased Name: FERNAND AUBERJONOIS MUCH ADMIRED FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT

WHO LIVED A CHRONICLE OF 20TH CENTURY
Fernand Auberjonois, the highly respected foreign correspondent of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and The Toledo Blade, died yesterday in Cork, Ireland. He was 93.

Throughout most of the Cold War, Mr. Auberjonois was one of the most admired American reporters in London. From 1956 until his formal retirement in 1983, and sometimes even after that, he covered many of the world's biggest news stories, sometimes traveling as many as 50,000 miles a year.

He was in Berlin when the infamous wall went up in 1961, and was still writing occasional features and commentary for The Blade when the wall crashed down in 1989. He covered summit conferences, roamed throughout Europe and Asia on special assignments, and helped explain an increasingly complex world to hundreds of thousands of readers.

Mr. Auberjonois' assignments ranged from traveling by mule through Afghanistan's Khyber Pass to covering the Algerian crisis in 1958 to meeting the queen at Buckingham Palace.

He was admired and respected by generations of reporters, many of whom also became personal friends. "Fernand was well-liked and highly respected, and couldn't have been more gracious," said Curt Prendergast, Time magazine's London bureau chief from 1968 to 1973.

"In his great way, he was the most wonderfully debonair foreign correspondent," said R.W. "Johnny" Apple Jr., former London correspondent for The New York Times.

Though Mr. Auberjonois won the Overseas Press Club award and was nominated several times for a Pulitzer Prize, his written journalism was only a small part of his measure.

"I really admire his modesty, given what a remarkable life he's had," said Dan Pedersen, who covered London for Newsweek from 1989 to 1997. "He was the global man before globalization."

Though he was regarded by both publishers for whom he worked, Paul Block Jr. and his son, John Robinson Block, as perhaps the best writer The Blade ever had, he preferred in retirement to write a series of novels, essays and memoirs in a very elegant French, his native language.

"He was the consummate journalist,'' said John Robinson Block, now publisher and editor-in-chief of the Post-Gazette and The Blade.

"Today there are swarms of reporters and boys on the bus. He was something different. He dug well below the surface while others were superficial. He was a master."

While he lived in Europe for most of his life, Mr. Auberjonois was a proud naturalized American citizen and a distinguished hero of World War II who won medals from not only the United States, but France and Poland as well. He broadcast before and during the war to Nazi-occupied France, and when the war ended, helped launch the French-language service of the Voice of America.

Later, he was summoned to appear before Sen. Joseph McCarthy's famous red-hunting committee and spent three hours being grilled by McCarthy and his aides, who were looking for communist subversion at the VOA in March 1953. They didn't find any, and Mr. Auberjonois was promptly and totally cleared by his agency.

Born in the small town of Jouxtens, just outside of Lausanne, Switzerland, he was the son of Rene Auberjonois (1872-1957), one of Switzerland's best-known post-impressionist painters, and grew up in a world in which celebrities, including Igor Stravinsky, were regulars at the family dinner table.

After earning a degree in geology, he crossed the Atlantic and arrived in New York on Aug. 28, 1933. That was in the depths of the Great Depression, but it wasn't enough to prevent him from falling instantly in love with America.

He worked for a time as Katherine Hepburn's private French tutor before joining the French news agency Havas. In 1937, he left to become the first host of L'Heure Francaise, NBC radio's first regular trans-Atlantic broadcast. The service continued after the fall of France, and Mr. Auberjonois was soon asked to join the fight against the Nazis by joining the Military Intelligence Service.

There was no reason that he would have had to fight at all. As a Swiss citizen, he could have kept his neutral status throughout the war. He was newly married, and by the time of Pearl Harbor was supporting a wife, Laura, two infant sons and two young stepdaughters.

Nevertheless, Mr. Auberjonois enlisted and was sent to a top-secret training camp in Canada that was run by the British intelligence service. He went on from there to a variety of missions, including stints as top aides to both Gens. George Patton and Dwight D. Eisenhower. He set up allied radio operations in North Africa and helped weave a web of deception to fool the Germans about where the D-Day landings would occur. He also broadcast allied propaganda to French-speaking Europe.

Several times, he went on secret missions behind enemy lines, where he led teams of men who were trained to blow up railway installations. He was given a cyanide capsule before each mission and advised to commit suicide if captured, to avoid torture and certain death.

Two days after D-Day, he managed to publish La Presse Cherbourgeoise, the first free newspaper of liberated France. Following the war, then-Maj. Auberjonois was awarded the U.S. Legion of Merit, France's Croix de Guerre with four citations, and Poland's Polonia Restituta. France eventually made him a chevalier of the Legion of Honor, roughly equivalent to a knighthood.

Following the war, he did a stint as publishing director for new editions of Time and Life in Europe before returning to New York to work first for NBC and then Voice of America.

Following his brush with McCarthy, he vowed never to work for the government again. Instead, he helped co-found the international public relations arm of Hill and Knowlton International. He was handling public relations for the Suez Canal Co. in the summer of 1956 when he got a call from Paul Block Jr., who had heard of Mr. Auberjonois from a mutual friend.

Mr. Block was looking for the right man to represent The Blade in Europe. Mr. Auberjonois was intrigued, but said he was reluctant to write for an audience he didn't know.

"But Paul said, 'Come to Toledo and find out who we are.' And in fact he took me personally on a guided tour of his city and northwestern Ohio. It was a fascinating experience, and we found that we shared many interests,'' he later said, adding, "I found that I liked Toledo and the Toledoans very much."

It was very rare for any but the largest papers to have their own foreign correspondents, but Paul Block felt it was essential for The Blade to have its own man reporting from what was widely regarded as center stage in the ongoing world superpower struggle.

Though he covered the big stories superbly, often interviewing participants in their own languages, whether French, German, English, Spanish or Italian, Mr. Auberjonois was perhaps at his best at writing fascinating feature stories that illustrated what life was like in divided Berlin, post-modern London or strife-torn Belfast. He said he often regarded his stories as letters written to his good friend Paul Block in Toledo, explaining the situation in Europe or elsewhere.

Mr. Auberjonois initially disagreed with his employer over where the bureau should be located. To avoid getting bogged down in the details of French politics, Mr. Auberjonois successfully argued that he should report from London, where it would be easier to keep up with developments that would have wide appeal to an American audience.

Paul Block, a passionate Francophile, would have preferred Paris, but reluctantly agreed.

His byline originally was "Fernand Fauber." It was feared "Auberjonois" would be too much of a mouthful for Midwesterners. That lasted for a few years, until the writer persuaded his editors "to give me my identity back.''

Throughout his career, he insisted on a high standard for news coverage.

"There was a great change in the news business in his life, mainly, the rise of entertainment values and the decline of serious news. Fernand resisted that as well as he could,'' Newsweek's Pedersen said. "He believed this was a serious business, though he also knew that it was important to observe and write with a sense of humor.''

His legendary sense of humor often helped himself and his colleagues maintain grace under pressure. During one particularly harrowing point when they were both covering the fighting between Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland, Time's Prendergast asked Mr. Auberjonois how he could possibly tell members of the two religions apart. "Oh, the Catholics have sweeter faces,'' he replied.

By the 1980s, he had settled in as the dean of American correspondents in London, whose advice was often sought by those who made pilgrimages to the Reform Club, his favorite after-hours haunt. But he remained a working journalist. "He was a colleague, not a father figure," Pedersen remembered. "He would be very helpful to younger correspondents, if he thought they were serious about news."

In his later years as a correspondent, Mr. Auberjonois found to his pride that his son, actor Rene Auberjonois, was rapidly becoming more famous than he. Though the younger Auberjonois preferred the stage, he became widely known thanks to two starring roles in popular TV series, "Benson" and "Star Trek: Deep Space Nine."

Though he formally retired in 1983, Mr. Auberjonois continued to contribute freelance features and an occasional news story to The Blade and the Post-Gazette until well into the 1990s. But he spent most of his time writing a series of well-received books in his native French, including two volumes of memoirs, "Entre Deux Mondes" (Between Two Worlds) and "L'Air d'Ailleurs" (Notes from Elsewhere), and "De Chittagong a Cork," which included stories about his ancestors.

Both books sold very well in Switzerland, where the first topped the best-seller lists for weeks. He wrote only one book in English, "Top Dog" (1980), which was allegedly penned by his beloved King Charles Cavalier spaniel, McMuck, and which was illustrated with Mr. Auberjonois' whimsical drawings; he was an accomplished amateur painter.

Besides Rene, he is survived by his wife, Helga, whom he married in 1968, his son, Michael, of Houston, Texas; a daughter, Anne, of New York City; and two stepdaughters, Ghislaine Vautier and Marie-Laure Degener.

The body will be cremated. The funeral will be held in his native Switzerland at a later date.


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