Biography: life and films
Charles Berling, one of France's busiest and most popular actors of stage
and screen, was born in Saint-Mandé, Val-de-Marne, France, on 30th
April 1958. The fourth of six children, his father was a navy doctor
and his mother an English teacher. He discovered his passion for acting
at school, so, having passed his baccalaureate, he went off to Brussels to
study drama at the Institut Supérieur des Arts, before joining the
Compagnie des Mirabelles and the National Theatre of Strasbourg, under the
direction of Jean-Louis Martinelli. For the first decade of his acting
career, from the early 1980s, he devoted himself almost exclusively to the
theatre.
Berling's screen career began with a small role in Marc Lobet's crime drama
Meurtres à domicile (1982). Towards the end of the decade,
he began appearing in television series and movies. His screen career
began to take off after he appeared in Pascale Ferran's debut film
Petits arrangements
avec les morts (1994), in a role that earned him his first César
nomination, for Most Promising Actor. The following year, he played
Jules in a television remake of
Jules et Jim directed by Jeanne Labrune
and had a notable supporting role in Claude Sautet's
Nelly et Monsieur Arnaud.
It was Patrice Leconte who gave Berling his first major screen role in the
lavish period comedy
Ridicule (1996),
for which he received another César nomination, for Best Actor.
Berling then picked up two further Best Actor César nominations for
what must surely rate as his finest screen performances to date, in Anne
Fontaine's
Nettoyage à
sec (1997) and Cédric Kahn's
L'Ennui (1998), in which the actor
is at his best as a sexually repressed neurotic. He made an admirable
Pierre Curie in Claude Pinoteau's
Les Palmes de Monsieur Schutz
(1997) and his comedic talents were put to good use by Frédéric
Jardin in
Cravate club (2002).
Other notable performances are to be found in Patrice Chéreau's
Ceux
qui m'aiment prendront le train (1998), Olivier Assayas's
Les Destinées
sentimentales (2000), Frédéric Schoendoerffer's
Scènes
de crimes (2000) and Anne Fontaine's
Comment j'ai tué mon père
(2001).
An actor of immense charm and versatility, Charles Berling is happy to divide
his time between mainstream cinema and films d'auteur, lending his talents
to established directors and promising newcomers. He has worked with
filmmakers as diverse as Michel Deville (
Un fil à la patte),
Raoul Ruiz (
Comédie de l'innocence), Jean-Pierre Mocky (
Grabuge),
Zabou Breitman (
L'Homme de sa
vie), Safy Nebbou (
Comme un homme) and Paul Verhoeven (
Elle). Meanwhile, in parallel
with his busy career on the small and big screen, he has been active in the
theatre since the early 1980s, and currently manages the Théâtre
Liberté in Toulon with his brother Philippe Berling, a successful
theatre director. He has also started a career as a singer, releasing
an album entitled
Jeune Chanteur in 2012.
Charles Berling has also written a book, based on his mother's life,
Aujourd'hui,
maman est morte, published in 2011. In 2015, he began working on
a screen adaptation of this book, having already directed a television documentary
Sur les traces de Gustave Eiffel (2009). His son Émile
Berling (born in 1990) has embarked on a successful career as an actor, having
made his screen debut alongside his father in Olivier Assayas's
L'Heure d'été
(2008).
© James Travers 2017
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