Biography: life and films
The most emblematic actress of the French New Wave, Bernadette Lafont
infused French cinema with her lively personality and sensual charm for
over half a century, appearing in more than 130 films whilst pursuing
an active career on stage and television. The epitome of the
modern, free spirited woman of the 1960s, Lafont was the ideal muse for
successive generations of iconoclastic filmmakers, from the Nouvelle
Vague onwards, and it was by being true to herself and projecting such
a radically unorthodox but genuine female persona that she gained the
love and admiration of cinema audiences across the world.
Bernadette Lafont was a true one-off, a force of nature who played a
significant part in altering how women were portrayed in cinema and
perceived by society over the past fifty years.
It is hard to imagine that such a rebellious, uninhibited personality
could instil itself in a child brought up in a strict Protestant
household. Bernadette Lafont was born on 28th October 1938 in
Nîmes, Gard, in southern France. Her father was a pharmacist,
her mother a staunch housewife who so resented the fact that she could
not have a son that she referred to her as Bernard. A studious
girl, Lafont was a model pupil at school and took dancing lessons at
the Opéra de Nîmes. Then, at the age of 16, she met
the man who was to change her life: Gérard Blain.
Blain was participating in a drama festival at Nîmes in the
summer of 1955 when he met the vivacious Bernadette. It was love
at first sight and the two were soon man and wife, although their
marriage would only last two years. (In 1959, Lafont divorced
Blain and married the sculptor Diourka Medveczky.) In the
spring of 1957, François Truffaut invited Gérard Blain to
take the lead in his first commercial film, a short entitled
Les Mistons. So taken was
he by Blain's charming wife that Truffaut persuaded her to take the
lead female role in the film, even though she had no previous acting
experience. Despite Blain's vigorous protestations, Lafont took
Truffaut up on his offer and soon found that acting was to be her
métier.
It was Truffaut's former colleague on the editorial staff of the review
magazine
Les Cahiers du cinéma
who gave Bernadette Lafont her first feature role, in the film that was
to mark the beginning of the French New Wave:
Le Beau Serge (1958). The
part of the village vamp was one that suited Lafont perfectly and
established her in the role to which she would be wedded for most of
her career, that of the incorrigible female rebel. Chabrol's next
major project with Lafont,
Les Bonnes femmes (1960), was
to prove very nearly disastrous for both the director and his actress,
as it was a provocative proto-feminist piece that shattered societal
norms in its portrayal of women.
Throughout much of the 1960s, Lafont struggled to gain popular
acceptance and ended up lending her talents to such lowbrow fare as
Les Bons vivants (1965) and
Un idiot à Paris (1967),
although she did occasionally surface in some important auteur pieces,
most notably Philippe Garrel's
Le
Révélateur (1968). Her leading role as the
fully liberated Marie in Nelly Kaplan's
La Fiancée du pirate
(1969) marked a turning point, allowing her to steal the admiration of
the cinema-going public and thereby begin to establish herself as one
of France's most respected actresses. After appearing in Jacques
Rivette's boldly experimental
Out 1 (1971), Lafont bolstered
her popularity in one of her best-known
enfant sauvage roles, that of the
seductive murderess in
Une belle fille comme moi
(1972), her second collaboration with François Truffaut.
This was followed by Jean Eustache's
La Maman et la putain (1973),
in which she starred alongside another leading light of the French New
Wave, Jean-Pierre Léaud, giving what is widely regarded as one
of her finest dramatic performances.
Too unconventional ever to be considered a star, with the passing of
the French New Wave Lafont was relegated to supporting roles for much
of the remainder of her career. Willing to work for inexperienced
filmmakers as well as old hands, she appeared in an eclectic mix of
films, ranging from mainstream comedies such as
La Gueule de l'autre (1979) to
thoughtful dramas like
La Tortue sur
le dos (1978). The habitually subversive filmmaker
Jean-Pierre Mocky saw in her a kindred spirit and cast her in three of
his films:
Le Pactole (1985),
Les Saisons du plaisir (1988)
and
Ville à vendre
(1992). In 1985, she took the role that won her the Best
Supporting Actress César of 1986, as housemaid and confidante to
13-year-old Charlotte Gainsbourg in Claude Miller's
L'Effrontée
(1985).
Just as her career was on the up, Lafont suffered a terrible personal
loss: her daughter Pauline died in a climbing accident in
1988. By keeping busy with her stage and film work, Lafont
overcame this tragedy and flourished as an actress, taking on an
increasing variety of roles. Some of her best work on screen was
with emerging new directors, including Marion Vernoux (
Personne ne m'aime, 1994),
Raoul Ruiz (
Généalogies d'un crime,
1997) and Pascal Bonitzer (
Rien sur Robert,
1999). In 1996, she co-directed a short film
entitled
Pourquoi partir?
(1996) with Bastien Duval.
Throughout the first decade of the third millennium,
now into her sixties, Bernadette Lafont
was highly sought after and continued to give of her best, be it in
modest auteur films such as Patricia Plattner's
Les Petites couleurs (2002) or
mainstream comedies like Eric Lartigau's
Prête-moi ta main
(2006). In 2003, she was awarded an Honorary César for her
life's work and in 2010 she was made an officer of the Legion of
Honour. 56 years after she made her film debut, Lafont went out
on a high, attracting an audience of over one million in France with
her portrayal of a septuagenarian drugs dealer in the quirky social
comedy
Paulette (2013). Her last
film - Sylvain Chomet's
Attila Marcel
- is due to be released in November 2013. Having a suffered a
series of heart attacks, Bernadette Lafont died on 25th July 2013, aged
74, and was interred in the family vault at
Saint-André-de-Valborgne. Not just a great actress, but
also an engaging, generous and authentic performer, Bernadette Lafont
imparted a large part of herself in the art that was so much a part of
her life, and French cinema is all the richer for that.
© James Travers 2013
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