Emmanuel Hoog, who was appointed CEO of Agence France-Presse in April 2010, is a top civil servant with a long experience in the cultural field.
During the nine years before he joined the Paris-based news agency, Mr Hoog had been head of the National Audiovisual Institute (INA), France’s public film and video archive, where he oversaw a programme to digitize hundreds of thousands of hours of footage.
Born in 1962, Mr Hoog graduated from the Ecole Nationale d’Administration (ENA) — the training ground for France’s elite civil servants — in 1988, and joined the culture ministry’s budget department.
A man of culture known for his love of poetry, Mr Hoog headed the prestigious Parisian Left Bank theatre, L’Odeon, for five years until 1997, when he headed to Milan, Italy, to help run the Piccolo Teatro.
He later became a culture and media adviser to Socialist politician Laurent Fabius when Fabius was speaker of the lower House of the French Parliament and then finance minister.
Emmanuel Hoog, who was appointed CEO of Agence France-Presse in April 2010, is a top civil servant with a long experience in the cultural field.
During the nine years before he joined the Paris-based news agency, Mr Hoog had been head of the National Audiovisual Institute (INA), France’s public film and video archive, where he oversaw a programme to digitize hundreds of thousands of hours of footage.
Born in 1962, Mr Hoog graduated from the Ecole Nationale d’Administration (ENA) — the training ground for France’s elite civil servants — in 1988, and joined the culture ministry’s budget department.
A man of culture known for his love of poetry, Mr Hoog headed the prestigious Parisian Left Bank theatre, L’Odeon, for five years until 1997, when he headed to Milan, Italy, to help run the Piccolo Teatro.
He later became a culture and media adviser to Socialist politician Laurent Fabius when Fabius was speaker of the lower House of the French Parliament and then finance minister.
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