Igor and Grichka Bogdanoff

Grichka (left) and Igor (right) Bogdanoff, in 1990s

Igor Yourievitch Osten-Sacken-Bogdanoff and Grichka Yourievitch Osten-Sacken-Bogdanoff, (or Bogdanov) (born on 29 August 1949 in Saint-Lary, Gers, France) are French TV personalities and producers, scientific essayists and who since the 1970s have presented various subjects in science fiction, cosmology and popular science. They were involved in a number of controversies, most notably what is known as the Bogdanov affair.

Igor and Grichka Bogdnaoff are fraternal twin brothers born to Yuri Mikhaïlovitch Osten-Sacken-Bogdanoff (1928-2012), a Russian painter of Tatar origin and descent from a line of Princes Bogdanoff, and to Maria Maya Dolores Franzyska Kolowrat-Krakowská (1926-1982). Igor was the first born and his brother Grichka was born 40 minutes later. They were raised as children by their maternal grandmother, Countess Bertha Kolowrat-Krakowská (1890-1982), in her castle in Saint-Lary, Gers in Southern France.[1] Called Istène, she was a polyglot, descended from an ancient, noble Bohemian family, had been married into the German princely House of Colloredo-Mannsfeld[2] when her pregnancy by the African American tenor Roland Hayes caused her to forfeit her palatial homes in Berlin and Prague, access to her four elder children, and her moral reputation in European society.[1] She tried to sustain her episodic relationship with Hayes after her divorce and his return to America, declining his offer to legally adopt and raise their bi-racial daughter.[1]

The twins spoke German, also learning French, Russian and English. The housekeepers and the workers in the castle came from various nationalities and the twins learnt various languages through contact with them. As young children, they had access to the rich, multilingual library of the castle, developing early on a great interest in astronomy. They were enrolled in the military school in Sorèze, and obtained their baccalaureate degrees at age 14, after which they left Gers to live in Paris. Their passions there included flying planes and helicopters, and gliders. Igor's claim to have flown 4000 hours resulted in the imposition of penalties in 2014 for misrepresentation.

Igor Bogdanoff received a Diplôme d'Études Approfondies (DEA) in Semiology and a doctorate in Theoretical physics, while Grichka Bogdanoff earned a diploma at the Institut d'Études Politiques (IEP) in Paris (Sciences-Po), and a doctorate in mathematics.

Television shows

In 1976, after they jointly published their first book Clefs pour la science-fiction. Roland Barthes wrote the introduction which was also published in the respected literary publication La Quinzaine littéraire. They were interviewed on Antenne 2 programme Un sur Cinq hosted by Patrice Laffont and where they presented a feature on science fiction. They moved later to TF1, interviewed by Yves Mourousi on TF1 who proposed them a regular science fiction section on his weekly Bon appétit, concentrating on robots and extraterrestrial phenomenon. This way a TV career was launched and they went on to have their own popular shows like Temps X. They later on produced and hosted two other scientific shows: 2002 – L'Odyssée du Futur in 1982 and Futur's, a weekly show in 1989. Other shows included Projet X 13 on 13ème Rue Universal and a shorter show Rayon X on France 2 and in 2008, Science X and Science 2 also on France 2. But these shows received increasingly negative reviews from more established scientific publications resulting in Science X being discontinued. In 2010, they returned with a new scientific TV magazine À deux pas du futur on France 2 rebroadcast in 2011 on France 5.

The Bogdanoff brothers preside on a chair of Cosmology at the private Megatrend University of Belgrade.

Controversy

Main article: Bogdanov affair

The preparation of both brothers for doctorates in 1991 in Promordial Cosmology at University of Bordeaux 1 created a number of controversies for them, with the university's director of thesis receiving a number of appeals, including influential figures in the university, to disallow their continued enrollment in the university's doctoral programme. The Bogdanoff brothers decided to move to Dijon, where they continued their thesis at the University of Burgundy. At the end of the two dissertation defenses, Grishka Bogdanoff was awarded the title of doctor "conditional on review of manuscript under the supervision of three members of a university scientific jury", Igor Bogdanoff's thesis was reset. He eventually obtained his doctorate three years later on 8 July 2002. Between 2001 and 2003 they published five articles with two republished in Annals of Physics and Classical and Quantum Gravity. Grichka Bogdanoff's thesis was "Fluctuations quantiques de la signature de la métrique à l'échelle de Planck" (1999) and Igor Bogdanoff's "État topologique de l'espace-temps à l'échelle zéro" (2002).

In 2002, a bigger controversy arose around the Bogdanoff brothers' work. It came to be known as the Bogdanov affair, arising from an academic dispute regarding the legitimacy of a series of theoretical physics papers written by the brothers. Debate erupted over the degree to which the work constituted a contribution to physics or was, instead, meaningless. The ensuing dispute drew considerable coverage in the mainstream media.

Personal life

Grichka (left) and Igor (right) Bogdanoff

Igor Bogdanoff has had six children. Dimitri, the oldest, was born in 1976 of a relationship with comedian Geneviève Grad. After marrying Countess Ludmilla d'Oultremont, he had three children with her; Sacha, born in 1990, Anna and Wenceslas. Igor's youngest offspring, Alexandre (born 2011) and Constantin (born 2014), were born of his marriage at the Château de Chambord in 2009 with writer Amélie de Bourbon de Parme (born 1977),[3] a natural and adopted daughter (1983) of Prince Michel of Bourbon-Parma (born 1926) by Laure Le Bourgeois, who is the husband of Princess Maria Pia of Savoy (daughter of Italy's last reigning king, Umberto II), brother of Queen Anne of Romania, and nephew of both Empress Zita of Austria-Hungary and Felix, Prince consort of Luxembourg.

Grichka Bogdanoff is not married and has no children.

In popular culture

Publications

The Bogdanoff brothers have published a number of works in science fiction, philosophy and popular science. Since 1991, they sign their books as Bogdanov, preferring "v" to "ff".

Bibliography

References

  1. 1 2 3 Brooks, Christopher A. Roland Hayes: The Legacy of an American Tenor. Indiana University Press. Bloomington. 2015. Pp. 358, 361-362, 366-367, 379. ISBN 978-0-253-01536-5.
  2. Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels, Fürstliche Häuser XIX. "Colloredo-Mannsfeld". C.A. Starke Verlag, 2011, pp. 127-129. (German). ISBN 978-3-7980-0849-6.
  3. Gala: Igor Bogdanov, six fois papa (French)
  4. http://www.nouvelle-vague.com/didier-wampas/ - Article de Nouvelle Vague sur l'album Comme Dans Un Garage (2013)
  5. Jordan Meynard (21 April 2015). "Cyril Hanouna lance un hymne au menton des frères Bogdanov" (in French). Le Figaro.
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