Georges Oltramare (17 April 1896 – 16 August 1960) was a Swiss writer, journalist, actor, nationalist politician and fascist militant, who became involved in collaboration in Nazi-occupied France during World War II.
[1] He became a noted author, winning the Foundation Schiller prize for his 1927 play Don Juan ou la Solitude and also wrote for a number of newspapers.
[1] This nationalist movement, which represented the country's French population, gained around 10% of votes in Geneva and Oltramare was invited to participate in the anti-communist Entente nationale genevoise with center-right parties in 1936.
Also writing for L'Appel and Revivre, as well as broadcasting on Radio Paris, Oltramare even survived an assassination attempt on the Champs-Élysées.
[1] He then lives between Geneva, Spain and Egypt, where he briefly worked as a propagandist for the nationalist regime of Gamal Abdel Nasser, before returning to Switzerland where in 1958 he revived Le Pilori, which combined again a form of Poujadism with anti-Semitism.