Biography: life and films
Marie-France Pisier was born in 1944 in Daclat, Indochina, where her
father was serving as a colonial governor. When she was 12,
she and her family moved to France. It was Mario Brun, a
journalist on the newspaper
Nice-Matin,
who brought the 17-year-old Marie-France Pisier to the attention of the
film director François Truffaut, who was looking for a young
actress to play the female lead in
Antoine et Colette (1962), a
30-minute segment of the portmanteau film
L'Amour à 20 ans
(1962). Brun had only just spotted Pisier in an amateur dramatics
production in Nice. Truffaut was immediately taken by Pisier's
charm and intelligence and launched her acting career with a short film
that was the sequel to his debut feature
Les 400 coups (1959).
Over the following decade, Pisier took supporting roles in a dozen
films and had become an established screen actress by the mid-1970s.
In the course of her 50-year long career, Marie-France Pisier appeared
in around 70 films and worked with some of France's great auteur
filmmakers, including many leading lights of the French New Wave
(François Truffaut, Jacques Rivette and Jacques Demy). She
both co-scripted and co-starred in Rivette's
Céline et Julie vont en bateau
(1974) and featured in several of André Techiné's early
films, including
Souvenirs d'en France (1975)
and
Barocco
(1976), both of which won her a César.
Pisier's international breakthrough came with Jean Charles Tacchella's
Cousin,
cousine (1975), which was a major success on both sides of
the Atlantic. The actress attempted to make a name for herself in
America, with Charles Jarrott's
The
Other Side of Midnight (1977) and the TV series
The French Atlantic Affair (1979),
but with little success, Returning to France, her acting career
went from strength to strength in the late 70s and 1980s, and she was
sought after by both auteur and mainstream filmmakers. One of her
most popular films was Gérard Oury's
L'As
des as (1982), a family-friendly comedy in which she starred opposite
Jean-Paul Belmondo and which attracted an audience of over five million
spectators in France.
In the latter part of her career, Marie-France Pisier was a passionate
advocate of the seventh art and was willing to lend her talents to
inexperienced filmmakers, including: Stéphane Giusti (
Pourquoi pas moi?, 1999), Thierry
Boscheron (
Sur un air d'autoroute, 2000),
and Yamina Benguigui (
Inch'Allah Dimanche,
2001). She also directed two films of her own:
Le Bal du gouverneur (1990) and
Comme
un avion (2002). Her final film appearance was in the
popular comedy
Il reste du jambon?
(2010). She died on 24th April 2011, aged 66, having apparently
drowned in the swimming pool at her home in Saint-Cyr-sur-Mer, in the
Var department of southeast France.
© James Travers 2011
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