You can enable subtitles (captions) in the video player
...Fields medalist is Cedric Villani.
Meet Cedric Villani, a flamboyant mathematician, who has emerged as the unlikely challenger to France's ruling party, La Republique En Marche.
Villani is running against his own party in a fratricide battle to become mayor of Paris. He wants to wrestle it from the socialists, who have held the key posts for almost 20 years. Villani became one of Emmanuel Macron's first and seemingly harmless supporters when the movement was created three years ago.
He served for two years as an MP and advised the government on artificial intelligence. Now the quirky scientist and his team are on a journey to change his image and use his skills towards a new political goal.
A month into his official campaign, Villani is already hitting 15 per cent in the polls, just behind the socialist incumbent, Anne Hidalgo and En Marches' Benjamin Griveaux.
Villani believes he is the true keeper of En Marche's grassroots values, but critics say that he risks dividing the En Marche vote.
But however warm the welcome might be, Villani has yet to prove that he can put together a realistic plan for Paris.
Villani wants us to think that we're seeing Emmanuel Macron's presidential campaign all over again. Whether he can pull it off and win over the capital is yet to be demonstrated.