Biography: life and films
Gabin, Delon and Ventura - three names, three very distinct personalities,
the three men who defined the French policier for three decades. Gabin
was the quietly powerful manipulator, Delon the cool, solitary angel of death,
Ventura the archetypal heavy. All three were icons of French cinema,
but whilst Gabin and Delon enjoyed high profile international careers, their
worldwide celebrity enduring to this day, Ventura's fame is mostly confined
to the French-speaking world. And yet, of the three actors, it is Ventura
who is most widely loved and respected in France, admired as much for his
humanitarian work as for his acting. Lino Ventura wasn't just a top
brand movie phenomenon, appearing in 75 films over three and a half decades,
he was also an immense force for good.
Ventura's achievements are all the more impressive considering his humble
origins. Named Angiolino Giuseppe Pasquale Ventura, he was born in
Parma, Italy on 14th July 1919, to Italian parents. The 8-year-old
Angiolino accompanied his mother Luisa to France, to settle with his father
Giovanni who had emigrated to the country a few years earlier to find work.
After failing to find her husband, Luisa Ventura was forced to take on menial
jobs to support herself and her son. Lino would never see his father
again.
Aged nine, Lino left school and turned his hand to any work he could find
to supplement the meagre family income. It was at the age of 16 that
he discovered his passion for wrestling. He trained hard and had hopes
of pursuing a career in the sport. Whilst working as a courier for
a travel agency firm, he met his future wife, Odette Lecomte, whom he married
in 1942. During the Second World War, Ventura served in the Italian
army, but deserted after the fall of Mussolini and beat a hasty retreat back
to France. After the war, he took up wrestling professionally, winning
the title of middleweight Champion of Europe in 1950. Not long after
this, he had to give up the sport after sustaining two leg fractures in a
fight with Henri Cogan. Thereafter, he derived an income as a trainer.
Lino Ventura's acting career began in 1953, when director Jacques Becker
gave him a significant supporting role opposite Jean Gabin in a film that
was to become a landmark polar -
Touchez pas au grisbi.
Ventura had no previous acting experience
and accepted the role only after Becker agreed to offer him the same
salary as its lead actor, a million francs. The film's success launched
Ventura's movie career and established his screen persona - as a tough gangster
thug with no scruples and an ever-ready iron fist. Gabin became a close
personal friend and the two actors appeared together in several prominent
films of the 1950s and '60s -
Razzia
sur la chnouf (1955),
Crime
et Châtiment (1956),
Le
Rouge est mis (1957),
Maigret
tend un piège (1958) and
Le Clan des Siciliens
(1969).
It was made-to-measure roles in
Le Gorille vous salue bien
(1958) and
Le Fauve est lâché
(1959) that put Ventura firmly on a star footing. With his distinctive
jowled features and powerful broad-shouldered frame, the actor brought a
striking physicality to his performances that perfectly suited his impulsive
brutish portrayals, accentuating the hard-edged noir reality of his films.
By the early 1960s, he was one of France's most bankable leading actors,
although he was almost invariably cast as the heavy, be it as the merciless
gun-toting gangster or doggedly determined cop.
Ventura worked with many important directors of the policier genre - notably
Jean-Pierre Melville (
Le Deuxième
souffle,
L'Armée
des ombres), Jacques Deray (
Avec la peau des autres),
Robert Enrico (
Les Grandes gueules)
and Claude Pinoteau (
Le Silencieux).
He was also partnered with some of the most prominent actors if the day, including
Jean-Paul Belmondo (
Class tous
risques,
Cent
mille dollars au soleil), Marlène Jobert (
Dernier domicile connu)
and Alain Delon (
Les Aventuriers).
By the mid-1960s, Lino Ventura had muscled in on another popular genre -
the gangster film parody. Directed by Georges Lautner, he notched up
a series of successes in this genre, in films that have become enduring classics:
Les Tontons flingueurs
(1963),
Les Barbouzes (1964)
and
Ne nous fâchons pas
(1966). The actor found relief from his habitual tough guy roles in
a number of popular comedies that revealed a gentler, more engaging side
to his nature -
Le Bateau d'Émile
(1961),
L'Aventure c'est
l'aventure (1972),
La Bonne
année (1973),
La Gifle
(1974). It is a curious feature of Ventura's work that only in the
last decade of his career did his screen portrayals come to evince the warmth
and humanity of the man himself.
International fame came in the early 1970s, after starring as a mafia boss
alongside Charles Bronson in Terence Young's
The Valachi Papers (1972).
By the 1980s, Ventura's screen persona had softened markedly. No longer
the indomitable tough guy, he was often cast as a victim of off-screen machination,
particularly in some memorable examples of the emerging neo-polar genre -
Adieu poulet (1975),
Cadavres exquis (1976) and
Espion, lève-toi (1981).
He even came to parody his earlier brutish persona in a number of films,
particularly
L'Emmerdeur (1973),
in which he formed an unforgettable comedy double act with the singer-turned-actor
Jacques Brel.
Ventura's last notable role was as an implacable police inspector harrowing
Michel Serrault in Claude Miller's
Garde
à vue (1981). The following year, he gave a creditable
portrayal of Jean Valjean in Robert Hossein's lavish production of
Les Misérables.
He bowed out with a fleeting appearance in Roger Hanin's
La Rumba (1987) - his next two planned
films (
Maledetto ferragosto and
La Jonque) were abandoned when
he died suddenly from a heart attack in Saint-Cloud on 22nd October 1987.
He was aged 68.
As noteworthy as it was, Ventura's acting career represented just one part
of his life. An equally important part was his devotion to the rights
of the disabled. In 1966 the actor and his wife Odette founded
a charitable institution, Perce-Neige, devoted to improving the life chances
of handicapped children. Having a disabled daughter of their own, the
couple had experienced for themselves the difficulty of parents in their
position. It was lack of support available to them in France that motivated
them to launch a national appeal in October 1965 to raise funds for an association
dedicated to supporting disabled children and their parents. Perce-Neige
remains one of the most important institutions of its kind in France, actively
involved in shaping legislation that respects the rights of disabled people.
As the charity proclaims on its
website:
Le combat initié par Lino Ventura continue.
© James Travers 2019
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