Biography: life and films
In an acting career that spanned 65 years, Edwige Feuillère came
to be regarded as one of France's most distinguished
actresses. Although she appeared in over sixty films and
became one of the great stars of French cinema in the 1940s and 50s,
she won greater acclaim for her stage work and is widely considered the
greatest French stage actress of her day. Feuillère
thrived on challenging and often controversial roles, and was eagerly
sought after by some of the greatest film and theatre directors of her
time. The poet and playwright Jean Cocteau gave her one of her
most celebrated roles in his play
L'Aigle
à deux têtes and said that she will forever be
remembered as the Queen of Snow, Blood, Pleasure and Death.
Feuillère's real name was Edwige Caroline Cunati-Koenig and she
was born on 29th October 1907 at Vesoul in the Franche-Comté
region of France. Her father was an Italian engineer, her mother
French, and she spent her early childhood in Italy. Following the
failure of several of her father's business ventures, the young Edwige
moved back to France with her family shortly after WWI and attended a
private school near Dijon. Once she had made up her mind to
become an actress, she enrolled in the Paris Conservatoire in 1928 and,
having graduated with distinction three years later, she had no
difficulty being admitted into that most prestigious of theatrical
troupes, the Comédie-Française.
It was around this time that Edwige Feuillère began her long and
illustrious screen career, in a series of comedy shorts for
Paramount. Under her original stage name Cora Lynn, she made her
feature debut in Karl Anton's comedy
Le
Cordon bleu, having appeared in a short film entitled
La
Fine combine with an unknown vaudevillian named
Fernandel. For some time afterwards Feuillère was typecast
as the vamp in a series of burlesque
comedies and lacklustre melodramas. Her first substantial film role was
that of the eponymous heroine of Abel Gance's film
Lucrèce Borgia (1935), a
role that brought her instant fame and established her imposing screen
persona - an aloof, seductive coolness combined with an austere
beauty. Feuillère was soon being courted by some of the
leading filmmakers of the day. Max Ophüls gave her the
principal role in two of his films,
Sans
lendemain (1940) and
De
Mayerling à Sarajevo (1940), and she also took the lead
in Maurice Tourneur's hit 1942 film
Mam'zelle
Bonaparte and Marcel L'Herbier's
L'Honorable Catherine (1942).
Other notable films of this period include Léo Joannon's
L'Emigrante (1940) and Jacques de
Baroncelli's
La Duchesse de Langeais
(1941).
Just as her screen career was starting to take off, Edwige
Feuillère continued her stage work and in 1939, at the
Théâtre des Galeries Saint-Hubert in Brussels, she first
played the part that was to become her most famous, that of Marguerite
Gautier in Alexandre Dumas'
La Dame
aux camélias. It was a role that was perfect for
Feuillère and she reprised it several times on stage over the
following two decades. The actress also distinguished herself in
a production of Jean Giraudoux's
Sodome
et Gomorrhe at the Théâtre Hébertot in
Paris in 1942, and several stagings of Jean Giraudoux's
La Folle de Chaillot.
By the late 1940s, Edwige Feuillère was accepted as one of the
leading French film actresses of her generation. She not only
worked with some of France's greatest film directors, she was also
partnered with some of the most iconic film actors of the day.
She played opposite Gérard Philipe in Georges Lampin's
L'Idiot
(1946) and Jean Marais in Jean Cocteau's
L'Aigle à deux têtes
(1948) (adapted from a 1946 stage play in which she had starred).
In Claude-Autant Lara's
Le Blé en herbe (1954),
Feuillère took on her most controversial role, that of the
unnamed woman (la dame en blanc) who wilfully seduces an adolescent
boy. The controversy surrounding this role may be what
precipitated the sudden decline in Feuillère's film
career. Over the following decade, she appeared in around a dozen
or so films, none of which matched her acting talents. She was
however well-served by Patrice Chéreau's
La Chair de l'orchidée
(1975), in which she made her last film appearance.
As her film work declined, Feuillère's stage career flourished
and having performed
La Dame aux
camélias one last time in 1959 she appeared in around
another thirty stage plays over the next three decades. These
include André Barsacq's 1971 production of Tennessee Williams'
Sweet Bird of Youth (
Doux Oiseau de jeunesse) at the
Théâtre de l'Atelier in Paris and two stagings of Jean
Giraudoux's
La Folle de Chaillot
in 1974 and 1975. In 1992, under the direction of Jean-Luc
Tardieu, she starred in a show entitled
Edwige Feuillère en Scène,
in which she performed extracts from some of her most famous roles. Her
final acting role was that of the Princesse Beaumont-Chauvry in the
1995 French television film
La
Duchesse de Langeais, directed by Jean-Daniel Verhaeghe.
Throughout her career, Edwige Feuillère was showered with
plaudits for her stage and film work. In 1983, she was awarded a
Molière for her stage work, and in 1984 she received a honorary
César for her contribution to cinema. She was also
recognised as a Grand officier de la Légion d'honneur. She
was 91 when she died, in Paris on the 13th November 1998, just a few
days after suffering a mild heart attack when she learned of the death
of Jean Marais, one of her dearest friends. The French nation
mourned Feuillère's passing almost as if she were a former head
of state, and the tributes that were made to her were sincere and deeply
felt, a respectful homage to her achievements as an actress. In
March 2007, a square in the 7th arrondissement of Paris was renamed in
her honour and now proudly bears the name of the woman who came to be
regarded as the Grand Dame of French theatre.
© James Travers 2012
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