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Rudy Franchi : ウィキペディア英語版 | Rudy Franchi
Rudy Franchi (born April 21, 1939 in New York City) is a writer and editor on film theory and film criticism and an antiques and collectibles expert. He helped to introduce the French critical protocol the "auteur theory" to the US. For several decades, Franchi also operated galleries that specialized in pop culture collectibles. In 1995, he began appearing as an appraiser on the PBS series, ''Antiques Roadshow'', specializing in pop culture memorabilia. ==Career== Franchi's early education was at St. John's Grammar School, St. Ann's Academy, and Fordham College. He left Fordham at the end of his junior year to work with Daniel Talbot at the New Yorker Theater running a weekly film society. He then started the Archive Film Society and after its first season, joined the Bleecker Street Cinema as associate program director (along with the late Marshall Lewis.) During this period, he was the New York representative of the Montreal World Film Festival and also did freelance publicity, specializing in independent and foreign films. He then joined 20th Century Fox's New York office as head of Newspaper and Trade Paper publicity. After a stint of unit publicity work, he married Barbara Passel and moved to Montreal with his wife and two young girls, and eventually the couple had a third daughter.
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