Philippe Hériat
Born Raymond Gérard Payelle, he studied with film director René Clair and in 1920 made his debut in silent film. Over the next fifteen years, he appeared in secondary roles in another twenty-five films including the 1927 Abel Gance masterpiece, Napoleon. In 1949 Hériat collaborated with film director Jean Delannoy to write the screenplay for the film Le Secret de Mayerling.
Philippe Hériat won the 1931 Prix Renaudot for his book L'Innocent. In 1939 he won the Prix Goncourt for Les Enfants gùtés, and the 1947 Grand Prix du roman de l'Académie française for Famille Boussardel.
In 1949 he was made a member of the Académie Goncourt, a position he held until his death in 1971. Hériat is buried in PÚre Lachaise Cemetery in Paris

Lucrezia Borgia

L'Inhumaine

Prometheus, Banker

The Gallery of Monsters
La chaussée des géants

The Flood

Nothing but Time

Divine
Napoleon at St. Helena

Bonaparte et la révolution

Napoleon

The Man of the Sea

The Late Mathias Pascal

Saint Joan the Maid

Le Carnaval des vérités

El Dorado

Sea Fever

Miracle of the Wolves

Don Juan et Faust

Le marchand de plaisirs
La jalousie du barbouillé

Napoléon Bonaparte

Rothchild
Mon coeur au ralenti
Le sexe faible

Fruits of Summer

L'Inhumaine
