Background
Sancton grew up in New Orleans and attended local public schools.
conductor bandleader writer jazz musician
Sancton grew up in New Orleans and attended local public schools.
University of Oxford. Harvard University.
From 1992 to 2001 he was Paris bureau chief for TIME Magazine, where worked for 22 years, and has contributed to publications including Vanity Fair, Fortune, Newsweek and the Wall Street Journal. His acclaimed memoir, Song for My Fathers: a New Orleans Story in Black and White (2006), recounts his early life among traditional jazzmen in his native New Orleans. He taught journalism at the American University of Paris from 2002 to 2004.
In 2007 he was named Andrew West. Mellon Professor in the Humanities at Tulane University, where he taught creative writing until 2011.
He began playing the clarinet aged 13, after being taken by his father, Thomas Sancton, Senior, to hear traditional New Orleans jazz at Preservation Hall. He took his first lessons with George Lewis, whose playing he cites as a particular inspiration.
Since then he has recorded over a dozen albums, and performed regularly at Preservation Hall and the Palm Court Jazz Cafe with his New Orleans Legacy Band. He has appeared numerous times at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival and the French Quarter Festival.
In January, 2012, he was featured in a Carnegie Hall concert marking the 50th anniversary of the Preservation Hall Jazz Band.
Sancton studied American History and Literature at Harvard, graduating magna cum laude in 1971. He subsequently took a doctorate (Doctor of Philosophy) in Modern History at Oxford as a Rhodes scholar, winning the Gilbert Chinard Award for studies in Franco-American history for his thesis, "America in the Eyes of the French Left, 1848-1871". He is the coauthor of the international bestseller Death of a Princess: The Investigation and author of the political thriller The Armageddon Project.