Biography: life and films
Barely turned fifty, Éric Caravaca already has seventy screen credits
to his name and he is certainly a familiar face to devotees of quality French
cinema. Ironically, the film that first brought him to an international
audience was one in which his face was obscured by layers of bandaging
- no, he wasn't playing the Mummy, but an unfortunate casualty of WWI being
treated for a facial disfigurement in the poignant wartime drama
La Chambre des officiers
(2001). Since then, Caravaca has become a favourite of serious auteur
filmmakers, who are most able to make use of his talent for authentic character
portrayal and his remarkable ability to project inner pain.
Éric Caravaca was born in Rennes, France on 21st November 1966.
The son of a construction engineer, he studied drama at the Conservatoire
national supérieur d'art dramatique in Paris, completing his education
with a year's sabbatical at the Actors Studio in New York. On his return
to Paris he went straight into the theatre. He made his screen debut
in Diane Bertrand's
Un samedi sur la terre (1996). His career
received a significant boost when the director François Dupeyron gave
him the lead role in his rural drama
C'est quoi la vie (1999),
the role for which he won the César for Most Promising Actor in 2000.
Subsequently, Caravaca worked for Dupeyron on
La Chambre des officiers
(2001), in which he had one of his most challenging roles as an officer of
the First World War in convalesce after being severely disfigured, and then
the immigration-themed drama
Inguelezi
(2004).
By the mid 2000s, Éric Caravaca was firmly established as an actor
of considerable ability, which he would put to the service of many capable
film directors. In Patrice Chéreau's
Son frère (2003), he gave
one of his most committed performances as a vulnerable young gay man struggling
to cope with his brother's terminal illness. Although he is more than
equipped to take on roles in genre films - such as Guillaume Nicloux's thriller
Cette femme-là (2003)
and Cédric Anger's
L'Avocat
(2011) - and comedies like Catherine Corsini's
Les Ambitieux (2007), Caravaca
is at his best when working with established auteurs such as Jérôme
Bonnell (
J'attends quelqu'un
(2006)), Lucas Belvaux (
La
Raison du plus faible (2006)) and Jean-Pierre Denis (
Ici-bas (2012)). The intensity
and depth that Caravaca brings to his performances are such that you cannot
help becoming caught up in his characters' personal dramas.
In 2006, Éric Caravaca directed his first film,
Le Passager,
in which he starred with Julie Depardieu and Vincent Rotttiers. As
well as appearing in several television films and series, including
Emma
(2011),
L'Épervier (2011) and Paris (2015), he has also had
a prominent stage career, appearing most notably in Samuel Beckett's
En
attendant Godot (1993), Marivaux's
La Fausse Suivante (1999),
Anton Tchekhov's
Ivanov (2004) and Henrik Ibsen's
Les Revenants
(2013). It is on cinema screens that Éric Caravaca has had the
greatest impact, and with so many directors lining up to use his talents
it is reasonable to suppose that his best work is yet to come. Truly
great actors don't come into their own until they are
at least fifty.
© James Travers 2017
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