Home > Newsletter > No. 25 > Alumni and Prof.'s on the Internet

Class of 1951, On the Internet: Ted (Sanche de Gramont) Morgan

FROM: BrainyEncyclopedia.com

Ted Morgan, French-American writer, biographer, journalist, and historian, born Le Comte Sanche Armand Gabriel de Gramont on March 30, 1932, in Geneva, the son of Gabriel Antoine Armand, Comte de Gramont (1908-1943), a hero of the French Resistance. Gramont is the name of an old French noble family, whose name is connected to the city Gramont, Agramont in Spanish, in the south French province of Labourd.

After his father's death in a training flight, Morgan began to lead two lives: on the one hand, attending Yale University and working as a reporter in Newark and New York, and on the other, still a member (albeit a reluctant one) of the French nobility and serving in the French Army as a second lieutenant and propaganda officer in the Algerian War of Independence.

In 1961, as a reporter for the New York Herald Tribune and still writing as "Sanche de Gramont," he won the Pulitzer Prize in the category of Local Reporting (Edition Time) for what was described as "his moving account of the death of Leonard Warren on the Metropolitan Opera stage," thereby becoming the only French citizen at the time to have ever have won this prize. The singer Leonard Warren had died of a massive cerebral vascular hemorrhage during a performance of La Forza del Destino.

In 1969, he began using the pseudonym "Ted Morgan," an anagram of "De Gramont." In an attempt to discard his aristocratic, European past, he had settled on a "name that conformed with the language and cultural norms of American society, a name that telephone operators and desk clerks could hear without flinching" (On Becoming American, 1978). In that year, he was featured in the CBS news program 60 Minutes, which explored his reasons for embracing American culture and showed him eating dinner with his family in a fast food restaurant. As "Ted Morgan," he was naturalized as an American citizen in 1977 (at which time he also renounced his titles of nobility), and has written biographies of Winston Churchill, William S. Burroughs, and Franklin Delano Roosevelt under this name. He was named a 1982 National Book Award Finalist for his biography Maugham.

Books

● Reds: McCarthyism in Twentieth Century America (2003)
● Shovel of Stars: The Making of the American West 1800 to the Present (1996)
● Wilderness at Dawn: The Settling of the North American Continent (1994)
● An Uncertain Hour: The French, the Germans, the Jews, the Barbie Trial, and the City of Lyon, 1940-1945 (1990)
● Literary Outlaw: The Life and Times of William S. Burroughs (1990)
● FDR: A Biography (1985)
● Churchill: A Young Man in A Hurry (1982)
● Maugham (1980)
● On Becoming American (1978)
● The Strong Brown God: The Story of the Niger River (1977) (as Sanche de Gramont)
● Epitaph for kings (1969) (as Sanche de Gramont)
● The French: Portrait of a people (1969) (as Sanche de Gramont)
● The Secret War: The story of international espionage since 1945 (1962) (as Sanche de Gramont)




SOURCE: http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/encyclopedia/t/te/ted_morgan.html




by Ted (Sanche de Gramont) Morgan
by Ted (Sanche de Gramont) Morgan