Biography: life and films
One of the most vivid emblems of the French New Wave, Jeanne Moreau was an
actress of exceptional dedication and ability. In a career that spanned
seven decades and over 140 films, she worked not only with some of the most
important French film directors of her period - Jacques Becker, Roger Vadim,
Louis Malle, François Truffaut, André Techiné, Bertrand
Blier - but also with such internationally renowned cineastes as Joseph Losey,
Orson Welles, Michelangelo Antonioni, Rainer Werner Fassbinder and Luis Buñuel.
Moreau's heyday was in the 1960s, when her sensual and often unsettling portrayals
of femininity crisply evoked both the essence of the time and its moral concerns.
As her voice deepened and grew huskier in later years, she became ever more
alluring and she remained remarkably active in her profession right up until
the end, working for cinema, television and the theatre well into her eighties.
She was more than an actress. She was a phenomenon.
Jeanne Moreau was born in Paris on 23rd January 1928. Her father ran
a restaurant; her mother was English, a former dancer at the Folies Bergère.
Enamoured of the dramatic art, she started taking drama lessons at an early
age, but her father, a staunch Catholic, was against her becoming an actress
and threw her out. She entered the Paris Conservatoire in 1947 and
she was soon performing with the Comédie-Française. She
then joined the Théâtre National Populaire (TNP), where she
acted alongside Gérard Philipe - the two actors would later make
a lethally seductive screen couple in Roger Vadim's
Les Liaisons dangereuses
(1960). Moreau's screen career got off to a modest start in the late
1940s, in supporting roles in Jean Stelli's
Dernier amour (1949) and
Richard Pottier's
Meurtres (1950).
The actress had a small but noticeable presence as a gangster's moll in Jacques
Becker's landmark polar
Touchez
pas au grisbi (1954) but her first real opportunity to scorch the celluloid
with her sizzling sex appeal came when she was cast in the title role in Jean
Dréville's historical drama
La Reine Margot (1954).
In interviews, Moreau later expressed disappointment with her early screen
career and claims that her devotion to cinema began only when she fell in
with directors who spurned the old conventions and the rigid hierarchies
of the film industry. The turning point came in 1956 when Louis Malle
gave her the leading role in his first feature
Ascenseur pour l'échafaud,
a stylish auteur take on the suspense thriller that is now recognised as
an immediate precursor to the French New Wave. Moreau then took the
lead in Malle's next film,
Les Amants,
portraying a liberated woman in an adulterous affair. The film caused
an instant furore on account of its explicit, mould-breaking love scene,
and this helped to cement not only the lead actress's fame but also her identification
as a prominent symbol of female emancipation amid a burgeoning sexual revolution.
This was further reinforced by the tortured roles that followed, in Peter
Brook's
Moderato cantabile
(1960) (which won her the Best Actress award at the Cannes Film Festival)
and Michelangelo Antonioni's
La Notte
(1961).
It was through Louis Malle that Moreau first came into contact with François
Truffaut, a prominent young film critic who had aspirations of becoming a
film director himself. After giving her a humorous walk-on part in
his debut feature,
Les 400
coups (1959), Truffaut then cast the actress as the lead in his best-known
film, the ménage à trois tragicomic drama
Jules et Jim (1962). One
of the great triumphs of the Nouvelle Vague, the film was a worldwide success
and it not only made Moreau an international star, it also launched her career
as a singer. The popularity of the song she improvised for the film
(
Le Tourbillon de la vie) led to two hit albums with the guitarist
Serge Rezvani. The role of Catherine in
Jules et Jim also came
to define and (to a degree) limit Moreau's screen persona. Like the
tempestuous Catherine, the actress was a passionate free spirit who was driven
to take full advantage of the freedoms life had to offer her, to create her
own code for living, rather than adhere to some prescribed, out-dated pattern
of existence. Moreau's unstinting rejection of convention accounts
for the extraordinary variety and richness of her acting career, as well
as its abundant eccentricities.
With the actress now at the height of her celebrity, world class filmmakers
on both sides of the Atlantic were queuing up to make use of her talents.
It makes an impressive roll call - Orson Welles (
The Trial), Jacques Demy (
La Baie des anges), Joseph
Losey (
Eva), Luis Buñuel (
Le Journal d'une femme
de chambre), Tony Richardson (
Mademoiselle), Elia Kazan (
The
Last Tycoon). She entered into an unlikely gun-toting comedy partnership
with Brigitte Bardot in Louis Malle's lively period romp
Viva María! (1965), picking
up a BAFTA along the way, and then returned to Truffaut for his Hitchcockian
black comedy
La Mariée
était en noir (1968).
Although her box office appeal was by this time now on the wane, Moreau was
still eagerly sought after by up-and-coming auteurs who could make full use
of her abilities and willingness to explore some less familiar avenues of
human experience. In Bertrand Blier's daring
Les Valseuses (1974), she mischievously
hooked up with Gérard Depardieu and Patrick Dewaere for another provocative
three-in-a-bed arrangement. She worked with promising newcomer André
Téchiné on
Souvenirs
d'en France (1975), and not long after this she found herself in
the sublime world of erotic fantasy that is Rainer Werner Fassbinder's
Querelle (1982). It was her feisty
role in Laurent Heynemann's
La Vieille qui marchait
dans la mer (1992) that won Moreau her only Best Actress César
in 1992 - previously she had been nominated for her work on Jean-Pierre Mocky's
Le Miraculé (1987) and
Michel Deville's
Le Paltoquet
(1986). She was subsequently awarded two Honorary Césars (in 1995
and 2008). An honorary Oscar came her way in 1998, in recognition of
her immense contribution to cinema. And in 2000 she was the first woman to
be elected to France's Académie des beaux-arts.
It was Orson Welles, the man who dubbed her the 'greatest actress in the
world', who encouraged Moreau to turn her hand to filmmaking. She directed
two engaging fictional dramas -
Lumière (1976) and
L'Adolescente (1979), and also
made an affectionate documentary on the actress Lillian Gish in 1983.
Whilst pursuing a film career, she returned periodically to the stage, and
met with considerable acclaim for her part in Hermann Broch's 1986 production
of
Le Récit de la servante Zerline. In 2001, Moreau had
the opportunity to play one of her literary heroes, Marguerite Duras, in
Josée Dayan's
Cet amour-là
(2001). She had previously worked with Duras on one of her most interesting
films,
Nathalie Granger (1972). In the 2000s, the actress still
had a formidable screen presence and was well-served by such prominent auteurs
as Amos Gitai (
Désengagement,
Plus tard tu comprendras)
and François Ozon (
Le Temps
qui reste). Her last film appearances were in Ilmar Raag's
Une Estonienne à Paris (2012) and Alex Lutz's
Le Talent
de mes amis (2015).
Moreau's private life was as unencumbered by social norms as her
professional career. She married twice - to the French actor Jean-Louis
Richard (who gave her a son, Jérôme Richard) and American film
director William Friedkin - although both marriages were short-lived and
ended in an amicable parting. She had close intimate relationships
with many of the directors she worked with, including Truffaut and Richardson.
Whilst devoted to her art as an actress, Moreau was also a compulsive bibliophile
and, in the course of her life, she became closely acquainted with many distinguished
authors - including Henry Miller, Jean Cocteau, Tennessee Williams, Patricia
Highsmith and Marguerite Duras. After a career that could not have
been better suited to her temperament, nor more dizzyingly varied, Jeanne
Moreau passed away peacefully at her Parisian apartment on 31st July 2017,
aged 89.
© James Travers 2017
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