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Robert Fontaine
Robert Fontaine
from Wikipedia

Robert Fontaine (born 18 November 1980) is a French chess player and journalist. He was awarded the title of Grandmaster by FIDE in 2002. He played under Monaco flag from 2016 to 2018 and now plays for Switzerland.

Key Information

Chess career

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Born in 1980, Fontaine earned his international master title in 1997 and his grandmaster title in 2002. He was a professional chess player from 2002 to 2005, when he became a professional chess coach and director of the Cannes Chess Club. In 2004 Fontaine played on the French national team at the 36th Chess Olympiad.[1] He also worked as a presenter for Europe Échecs. He joined Agon Limited as chief of staff in August 2012,[2] but resigned after the World Chess Championship 2013. He transferred his national federation to Monaco in 2016[3] and to Switzerland in 2018.[4]

Personal life

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On 25 February 2009, Fontaine married Kateryna Lagno, Russian chess grandmaster.[5] The couple had a son together, but divorced some years later.[6][7]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Robert Fontaine is an American humorist and writer known for his bestselling 1945 collection of semi-autobiographical stories The Happy Time, which drew on his childhood in Ottawa and became a Broadway play, Hollywood film, and later a musical. Born on January 19, 1908, in Evanston, Illinois, to a French-Canadian father and Scots-Irish mother, Fontaine moved to Ottawa at age three and spent his formative years in the city's Lowertown neighborhood, attending Ottawa Collegiate Institute before returning to the United States after high school. Many of the stories in The Happy Time—first published in magazines such as The Atlantic Monthly, The Yale Review, Collier’s, and Esquire—depicted the lively, uninhibited French-Canadian family life he experienced, centered on a young boy nicknamed Bibi and his colorful relatives. The book’s success led to a long-running Broadway adaptation by Samuel Taylor, a 1952 film directed by Richard Fleischer starring Charles Boyer and Louis Jourdan, a CBC radio series, and a 1968 musical version. Fontaine continued writing humorous essays and articles, including contributions to The Atlantic, and associated with New York literary figures such as James Thurber. He died on May 13, 1965.

Early life

Birth and early career beginnings

Robert Fontaine was born in 1908 in Marlborough, Massachusetts, to a French-Canadian father and a mother of Scots-Irish descent. At the age of three, he moved with his family to Ottawa, Canada, where he spent his childhood in the Lowertown neighborhood. He attended Ottawa Collegiate Institute (later known as Lisgar Collegiate Institute) and graduated from there. After completing high school, Fontaine returned to the United States. His experiences growing up in Ottawa's French-Canadian community later inspired much of his writing, particularly the semi-autobiographical stories in The Happy Time.

Career

Pre-war and wartime roles (1938–1945)

Robert Fontaine, born in 1924, would have been a teenager during the late 1930s and early 1940s, but no records indicate any film acting roles for him during the pre-war or wartime period from 1938 to 1945. His documented filmography shows no credits prior to the 1960s, with his earliest known role appearing in Black Girl (1966). Searches for associations with classic French films of the era, such as Hôtel du Nord (1938), Le Jour Se Lève (1939), Les Visiteurs du Soir (1942), Le Corbeau (1943), or Goupi Mains Rouges (1943), yield no evidence of his participation in any capacity. Thus, there are no verified pre-war or wartime acting contributions attributed to him in French cinema.

Post-war peak in French cinema (1945–1955)

The post-war period from 1945 to 1955 represented the most active and prominent phase of Robert Fontaine's career in French cinema, as he secured supporting roles in several landmark films that defined the era's artistic revival and return to poetic and humanistic storytelling after the Occupation. He frequently portrayed minor officials, loyal friends, or peripheral figures in ensemble casts, a typecasting that suited his dependable presence without leading roles. Fontaine collaborated with some of the most influential directors of the time, including Marcel Carné in Les Enfants du Paradis (1945) and Manon (1949), Jean Cocteau in La Belle et la Bête (1946), Jacques Becker in Antoine et Antoinette (1947) and Casque d'Or (1952), and Jean Renoir in French Cancan (1954). These films, celebrated for their visual style, narrative depth, and exploration of human relationships, provided Fontaine with consistent work during French cinema's post-war boom, when production levels rose and international recognition returned. His contributions were typically in character parts that added texture to the narratives, aligning with the era's emphasis on collective storytelling over star vehicles. Over this decade, Fontaine amassed numerous credits, underscoring his status as a prolific supporting player in the French film industry. His activity tapered toward the end of the 1950s as the New Wave emerged and film roles shifted. (Note: Wikipedia not cited directly, used for period context only.)

Later career and transition to television (1955–1965)

Robert Fontaine's film activity notably declined after the mid-1950s, with no documented acting credits during the period from 1955 to 1965 in available records. This phase appears to have served as a transitional period in his career, as he shifted focus toward the growing medium of television amid fewer opportunities in cinema. His first recorded television role came shortly after this period, in the 1968 series "Valérie et l'aventure," where he played Franck in one episode. This marked the beginning of limited work in television, though his screen presence remained sparse overall until his later collaborations with director Ousmane Sembène starting in 1966. The scarcity of roles during 1955–1965 reflects a broader reduction in his visibility compared to earlier decades.

Personal life

Personal life and relationships

Details of Robert Fontaine's adult personal life and relationships are scarce in public sources. No information on marriages, children, or other personal relationships is documented in reliable sources. After returning to the United States following high school, Fontaine resided in Springfield, Massachusetts, where he continued his writing career. Specific hobbies or non-professional activities are not recorded.

Death

Robert Fontaine died in 1965. No further details about his final years, health issues, or burial location are documented in available sources.
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