Biography: life and films
Léonce Perret's recognition as one of the great pioneers of cinema
has been a long time coming. Despite his prodigious output (he made
over 400 films in less than thirty years, a third of which are now lost)
and the considerable impact he had in developing the new art of cinema, Perret
has been largely overlooked over the seventy years following his untimely
death in 1935. Not only does he have a right to be considered one of
the founding fathers of French cinema (as important as Alice Guy, Georges
Méliès, Albert Capellani and Louis Feuillade), he also played
a significant part in early American cinema. An enthusiastic innovator,
he survived the transition to sound but died not long afterwards at the age
of 55. The recent restoration and release of some of his films on DVD
should hopefully go some way to revive the memory of this forgotten genius
and place him where he deserves to be - among the giants of early cinema.
Léonce Joseph Perret was born on 14th March 1880, at Niort in the
Deux-Sèvres department of western France. His parents owned
a carpentry business and he had two older siblings, a brother Ernest and
sister Lucie. From an early age, Léonce had artistic leanings
that included an avid interest in literature, poetry and music. After
he was exempted from military service on health grounds, he went to Paris
to attend a music school, Schola Cantorum, with the aim of becoming a musician.
As he did so, he acquired an interest in the theatre and started taking drama
lessons. He began appearing in stage productions not long afterwards
and landed a contract with the Théâtre de l'Athénée.
In 1905, he signed another contract with the Odéon, where he was directed
by Abel Tarride and André Antoine. Four years later, he was
engaged by the Saint Petersburg Theatre.
It was whilst he was performing
Cyrano de Bergerac on stage in Berlin
that Léonce Perret came to the attention of Georges Grasset, the director
of Gaumont's German subsidiary. It was Grasset who persuaded the 28
year old actor to become involved with the new medium of cinema. On
his return to Paris, Perret was soon taken on by Gaumont and, working closely
with the company's artistic director Louis Feuillade, was soon busy churning
out short films that encompassed the entire dramatic range, from comedies
and melodramas to adventure films and thrillers. In total, Perret directed
around 350 films during his time at Gaumont, and acted in many of his films.
One of his first films was
Molière
(1909), an early biopic for which Abel Gance was hired to play the
young playwright.
It was around this time that Léonce Perret met the dancer and singer
Valentine Petit. They married a short while later and Petit became
not only the director's muse, taking the lead in several of his films, but
also his personal assistant. Petit's strong personality and controlling
influence would often cause ructions on the set. Perret was better
served by his other discovery, Suzanne Grandais, a performer at the Moulin
Rouge who had a prominent career as a film actress until her tragic death
at the age of 27 in 1920. Grandais lent her talents to some of the
director's more accomplished films of this time, including the comedy
Le Chrysanthème rouge
(1912) and well-paced thriller
Le Mystère
des roches de Kador (1912). The latter's importance isn't confined
to its obvious artistic qualities (the location photography in Brittany is
particularly striking), it also inspired Feuillade to make his thriller serials
-
Fantômas,
Les Vampires,
Judex - hefty crowdpleasers that soon
become Gaumont's most lucrative line.
In 1912, Perret embarked on his series of
Léonce shorts (
Léonce
fait des gaffes,
Léonce à la campagne,
Léonce
et les écrevisses, ...) - around forty in total, comprising a
mix comedies and dramas. Such was the immense popularity of these films
that the director soon realised the commercial value of star billing.
At the time, it was not the practice for directors' and actors' names to
appear on the film, and Léon Gaumont took some persuading to be convinced
of the merit of doing so. Perret got his way and by placing the actors'
names on the screen at the start of his films he initiated the star system
that would have massive implications for cinema.
Léonce Perret learned a great deal from his mentor Louis Feuillade
and shared his love of the weird and macabre (apparent in films such as
Sur les rails (1912) and
Les Dents de fer (1913)).
But so enthusiastic and gifted an experimenter was he that he soon surpassed
his master, by introducing techniques that would make Feuillade's films appear
grimly static and theatrical. Perret had the honour of directing Gaumont's
first feature-length film,
L'Enfant
de Paris (1913), and with its use of close-ups, deep focus and camera
movement it was a dramatic step forward. The film brought its director
international renown and put him on a par with America's great film innovator,
D.W. Griffith. Perret followed this with another ambitious feature,
Le Roman d'un mousse
(1914), a compelling adventure thriller.
By now France was leading the world in cinema and Léonce Perret was
French cinema's greatest creative talent (surpassing even Pathé's
star director Albert Capellani in both innovation and productivity).
The outbreak of the First World War in the summer of 1914 would end all that.
Over the next four years, commercial filmmaking in France was throttled back
through rationing of scarce materials and America soon overtook its one European
rival to become the dominant force in cinema exploitation - a position it
has occupied ever since.
At the start of the conflict, Perret was called up but, because of his health,
he only served for a short time as a medical orderly in Niort. In 1915,
Gaumont called him back to make a series of propaganda films, including
Françaises,
veillez! Perret took over as the company's artistic director
but soon became frustrated by the lack of resources. He desperately
wanted to make more ambitious films, as Gaumont's rival Pathé had
been doing for some years, and this led him to move to the United States
in 1917, to work for World Film Corporation in Richard, Virginia. In
addition to popular melodramas such as
The Silent Master (1917) and
The Mad Lover (1917), Perret also directed a patriotic piece
Lest
We Forget (a.k.a.
N'oublions jamais) which proved to be a massive
hit in France.
Now financially secure, Perret founded his own film production company, Perret
Pictures Inc., although this made only three films, the most interesting
being
Lifting Shadows (1920), a forthright attack on bolshevism.
With the American film industry badly hit by a sudden economic downturn,
Perret returned to France in 1921 and directed
L'Écuyère
(1922) for Pathé. Perret's next feature,
Koenigsmark
(1924), is considered his masterpiece and represents one of the pinnacles
of the silent era. This was followed by
Madame Sans-Gêne (1925),
showcasing the talents of American star Gloria Swanson - significantly this
was the first Franco-American film production, although it is now lost.
For Pathé-Natan, Perret directed
La Femme nue (1926), and then
took up the post of artistic director at the recently created company Franco-Film,
based in Nice. The first film he directed for the company,
Morgane
la sirène (1927), was a major success, and this was followed by
La Danseuse orchidée (1928) and
La Possession (1929).
The arrival of sound was a challenge that Léonce Perret embraced with
his customary enthusiasm. Over the next fifteen years he would direct
only seven sound films and it is fair to say he never fully came to grips
with the new medium. His first sound
Quand nous étions deux
(1929), was only a modest success, and after the failure of Franco-Film
Perret's creativity was stymied on his further productions with Adolphe Osso
(
Arthur (1931)) and Pathé-Natan (
Après l'amour
(1931),
Enlevez-moi (1932)). Of his sound films,
Il était
une fois (1933) is the one that attracted most critical acclaim.
The last feature that Perret completed,
Un soir à la Comédie-Française
(1935), in an interesting experimental piece that combines theatre and documentary
with extracts from plays by Molière and Sacha Guitry performed by
actors of the Comédie-Française. Perret was preparing
a sound version of
Koenigsmark when he fell ill and had to be hospitalised.
It was whilst being treated at the Saint Jean de Dieu clinic in Paris that
he died, on 12th August 1935. He is now buried in his birth town of
Niort.
© James Travers 2017
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