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2007-03-21lkjlkj

Frontline Video Training

Practical courses teaching all the skills you need to work as a video journalist

FRONTLINE FIXERS FUND

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In response to the murder of Ajmal Naqshbandi in Afghanistan we have started a fund for the families of fixers killed or injured while working in international media. 100% of the money currently collected will go to Ajmal's family.

Please donate here >>

FRONTLINE CLUB MERCHANDISE

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Frontline Club organic cotton T-Shirts, mugs and notebooks

Click here to see the range and buy from US >>

Click here to see the range and buy from UK >>

Talk and Screening: Anybody Here Been Raped and Speaks English? FULLY BOOKED

Tue 20th May, 7.30pm (arrive 7.00pm) Price: £5.00

Journalists and film-makers celebrate the life of one of the world’s leading foreign correspondents Edward Behr. Followed by Q&A

Location: 13 Norfolk Place, London, W2 1QJ  

Among those taking part will be broadcaster John Simpson (BBC), journalist Marie Colvin (The Sunday Times), journalist Christopher Dickey (Newsweek), film director Roman Polanski (taped), journalist Olivier Todd (former BBC Paris Correspondent), literary agent Ed Victor (taped), documentary maker Jeffrey Lee (former BBC Correspondent producer) journalist Jonathan Randal (former Washington Post correspondent), Richard Mayne and film producer Jeremy Thomas (The Last Emperor - taped).
 
The evening will be chaired by film-maker Anthony Geffen who worked with Edward Behr on several documentary projects including the acclaimed and controversial film Hirohito: Behind The Myth.
 
Born in 1926, Edward Behr was one of the most distinguished foreign correspondents of his generation. He wrote for the most important news outlets of the day: Reuters, Time-Life, Time and Newsweek. He covered the world’s hot-spots, from Africa to China and Vietnam, from Cuba to Prague and Paris. He interviewed Chairman Mao about the Cultural Revolution, learnt to tango from Fidel Castro, and in 1968 alone covered Saigon during the Tet Offensive from Saigon, the Spring Uprising in Prague and the student riots in Paris.

Inspired by Evelyn Waugh’s Scoop, Edward went on to write his best-selling memoirs, which became the foreign correspondents’ primer, Anybody Here Been Raped And Speaks English? The title was inspired by a request from a BBC camera crew he allegedly overheard whilst covering fighting in the Congo in 1961.

Edward’s work has been admired by fellow correspondents and a generation of subsequent journalists. The British journalist James Cameron described him as ‘One of the most experienced foreign correspondents of his and my generation’; author Simon Winchester called him ‘One of the best, surely no correspondent’s life was ever as ever as hilarious and bizarre’. Marie Colvin credited her decision to become a foreign correspondent to reading Behr’s book.

Edward was extraordinarily prolific. He wrote some nineteen successful and very varied books ranging from the authoritative to the entertaining. Among them were The Algerian Problem, Kiss The Hand You Cannot Bite: The Rise and Fall of the Ceausescus, Hirohito: Behind The Myth, The Last Emperor (winner of the Gutenberg prize which accompanied Bertolucci’s film of that name) Les Miserables: History In The Making and The Story of Miss Saigon.  He even wrote a novel, Getting Even, based on his experience as a foreign correspondent.

Edward’s work also included a wide range of award-winning television documentaries ranging from Ceausescu: Behind The Myth to The American Way of Death as well as films on Prohibition, Bombay, and the Kennedy Family. Drawing on his expertise on the Far East, he collaborated on the hit musicals Les Miserables and Miss Saigon.

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Event Calendar

Dec 2008
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1st December

HIV / AIDS Season: Have we seen the worst?

There are currently around 33 million people worldwide living with HIV. Almost 2/3 of these are in sub-Saharan Africa where nearly 12 million children have been orphaned. But while huge progress has been made in some areas - including a decline in HIV-related deaths - the current epidemic cannot be reversed without reducing the rate of new HIV infections. The search for the elusive vaccine continues, but for how long can we justify the millions being spent on this when we are apparently no nearer to finding a vaccine than we were 27 years ago when AIDS was first recognized? We ask our panel of policy makers, scientists, journalists and community activists where they think the future lies for combating HIV and whether we really have seen the worst.

13 Norfolk Place, London W2 1QJ

1st December

HIV / AIDS Season: Press briefing with Helen Epstein

According to Epstein, the Secretariat of the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) has lost valuable ground by ignoring for years the contribution of long-term concurrent relationships to Africa’s AIDS epidemic.UNAIDS may be “contributing to the mystification of AIDS in Africa by promoting a needlessly overcomplicated view of the epidemic”, says Helen Epstein, an independent consultant on public health in developing countries. She argues that long term, overlapping, or “concurrent” partnerships provide at least a partial explanation for the staggeringly high infection rates in the general population in some African countries, and calls for UNAIDS to reassess its handling of scientific data.

13 Norfolk Place, London W2 1QJ

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15th December

Grenadier Christmas Lunch

Private event for Grenadier Christmas lunch on 15 December at the Frontline Club. On arrival, please make your way to the first floor reception and you will be guided to the bar. We will be having lunch in the Forum on the second floor from 1pm onwards. This is a 'by-invitation' event only.To book a place please click on the link below.

13 Norfolk Place, London, W2 1QJ

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16th December

Reactive: Mumbai - India's 9/11

Dubbed as India's 9/11, the recent attacks in Mumbai left almost 200 dead and the world reeling. While criticism has been levelled at India's government for their slow response to the attacks as well as their failure to act on intelligence, Lashkar-e-Toiba - a Kashmiri extremist group based in Pakistan - are being blamed for carrying them out.What will these attacks mean for the ongoing "war on terror" and will India now be seen as a soft target? Will deteriorating relations between Pakistan and India be brought closer by a new co-operation to work together in the aftermath of the attacks and a joint desire to bring the perpetrators to justice? Or will these attacks simply fuel the existing tensions between these two nuclear powers?

13 Norfolk Place, London W2 1QJ

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Event News

2007-04-04

Training Co-ordinator

Frontline is looking to recruit a part-time Training Co-ordinator who will be responsible for overseeing all aspects of the Frontline Club Charitable Trust's training programme. At least 2 years marketing experience and 5 years previous office support and managerial experience required. Please contact Duncan Furey (duncan.furey@frontlineclub.com) for a full job description and person specification


Forthcoming Events

Mon 15 Dec 08, 12.30 for 1.00pm - £65.00

Grenadier Christmas Lunch

Tue 16 Dec 08, 7.00pm - £10.00

Reactive: Mumbai - India's 9/11

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