Biography: life and films
Few would dispute that Patrick Dewaere was one of the finest actors of
his generation, one of the few French actors who had the same rare
combination of talent, courage, charisma and commitment which had
previously distinguished the great American method actors.
Dewaere brought an electrifying reality to every one of his screen
portrayals with performances that were bold, subtle and profound,
sometimes poignant, sometimes
disturbing. His career spanned 31 years and includes appearances
in 37 feature films, but it was only in his last decade that he came to
prominence, in the roles for which he is now best remembered - stark
and convincing portrayals of social outcasts, fragile loners or
self-destructive romantics living at the extremity of their
passions. It was a career most actors would envy, but it was also
one that ended suddenly, in terribly tragic circumstances. In
real life, Patrick Dewaere was a man who was as complex and mercurial as
the characters he portrayed on screen.
Patrick Dewaere was born Patrick Jean-Marie Bourdeaux on 26th January
1947 in Saint-Brieuc in Britanny, in northwest France. The son of
the actress Mado Maurin, he was the third of six children in a family of
actors who regularly appeared on stage, on film, on television and on
radio. He had little choice but to follow in his parents'
profession and he made his film debut, aged four, under his original
stage name Patrick Maurin, in the 1951 film
Monsieur
Fabre. The young Patrick had a difficult
childhood and hated school, partly because he was teased for his early
film roles. He joined Jacques Fabbri's theatre troupe in 1956 and
proved to be a prodigious child actor. Over the next decade, he
would take several small parts in a number of films, including H.G.
Clouzot's
Les Espions (1957) and
René Clément's
Paris brûle-t-il ?
(1965).
Aged 17, the promising young actor was to suffer his first major
personal crisis. He was shocked to discover that Pierre-Marie
Bourdeaux was not his biological father; in fact he was the son of
Michel Têtard, a conductor who died in 1960, aged 35 (curiously
the same age at which Dewaere would himself die). Not only did he
break away from his family, he also changed his stage name to Patrick
de Waëre, adopting a form of the surname of his maternal
grandmother, Devaëre. It was under this name that he
appeared in the 1964 television series
Les Hauts de Hurlevent (an
adaptation of
Wuthering Heights
in which he played a young Heathcliff). Not long after this, the
young actor adopted the professional surname Dewaere, the name by which
he would become best known. The first film in which he was
credited under this name was René Clément's
La Maison sous les arbres (1971).
In 1967, Dewaere had a leading role in the French television series,
Jean de la Tour Miracle, after
which his adult acting career suddenly began to take off. In
1967, he joined Romain Bouteille's troupe at the Café de la
Gare, a popular dinner theatre in Paris where he stayed for ten years
and forged long-term relationships with many future stars of French
cinema, including Coluche, who would become his closest friend, and
Miou-Miou, with whom he would have an intense love affair. It was
here that he met his first wife Sotha (Catherine Sigaux), to whom he
was married from 1968 to 1979. Around this time, Dewaere began
working as a voiceover artist, famously dubbing Dustin Hoffman in the
French release of
The Graduate. He also
began to indulge in his second passion, music. In 1971, he
recorded a single with Françoise Hardy,
T'es pas poli. Dewaere's film
career was still very much on the back burner, and the actor had to
content himself with minor roles in such films as Jean-Paul Rappeneau's
Les Mariés de l'an II
(1971) and Claude Faraldo's
Themroc (1973).
Patrick Dewaere's big breakthrough came in 1974, when he appeared
alongside another star-in-the-making, Gérard Depardieu, in
Bertrand Blier's hit anarchic comedy
Les
Valseuses. The film also featured Miou-Miou in her
first important screen role and it was whilst making this film that she
and Dewaere began their two-year long love affair, which gave Dewaere
his first daughter, Angèle. The relationship ended in
bitter acrimony when Miou-Miou fell in love with the singer Julien
Clerc.
By the late 1970s, Patrick Dewaere had become a major star of French
cinema, but the actor eschewed mainstream blockbusters (which might
have brought him greater international renown) in favour of more modest
auteur films, which allowed him to get to grips with far more complex
and challenging characters. This was perhaps why he was more
willing to work with inexperienced young film directors than
established filmmakers. He took the lead in Claude Miller's debut
feature
La Meilleure façon de marcher
(1975) and collaborated on early films by directors who are now held in
great esteem - Alain Corneau (
Série noire),
Jean-Jacques Annaud (
Coup de tête) and
André Techiné (
Hôtel des Amériques).
He also worked with several established filmmakers, notably Yves
Boisset (
Le Juge Fayard dit le shériff),
Claude Sautet (
Un mauvais fils) and Philippe
de Broca (
Psy).
In 1980, Patrick Dewaere acquired instant notoriety when he violently
assaulted the journalist and critic Patrice de Nussac, after the latter
revealed intimate details about the actor's private life (his
forthcoming marriage to Élisabeth Malvina Chalier, a.k.a.
Elsa). So outraged was the press by this attack that they refused
to mention his name in connection with his next film,
Un mauvais fils. The incident
was to impact on Dewaere's ability to find work. Increasingly, he
found himself driven towards the fringe, away from bigger productions
that may have made him as big a star as his closest contemporary,
Gérard Depardieu, whose career had begun to skyrocket.
Dewaere's reputation as an outsider is reinforced by the fact that
whilst he was nominated six times for a César, he never once
received the award.
It was in October 1980 that Patrick Dewaere married his second wife,
Elsa, who would give him his second daughter, Lola. The marriage
lasted less than two years and ended when Elsa left Dewaere to begin an
affair with his best friend, Coluche. The break-up was to have a
devastating impact on the actor, and his state of mind
around this time is perhaps betrayed in his last film, Alain Jessua's
Paradis pour tous (1982), in which
he played a suicidal depressive. It was whilst he was working on
his next film, Claude Lelouch's
Edith et Marcel (in which he
played the part of the ill-fated boxer Marcel Cerdan) that Dewaere's
life reached its tragic conclusion. On the 16th July 1982, after
a cordial morning meeting with his director, the actor returned to his
home in Paris, picked up a rifle given to him by Coluche, and shot
himself in the mouth. Dewaere left no note to explain his actions
and for years his suicide remained a mystery. Recently, it has
been revealed that shortly before he killed himself, the actor received
a telephone call from his ex-wife Elsa (then staying in Guadeloupe with
Coluche) telling him he would never see his daughter again.
Dewaere was subsequently interred in the family vault at
Saint-Lambert-du-Lattay cemetary in Maine-et-Loire.
Today, Patrick Dewaere remains one of the most revered of French
actors. He is honoured by the Prix Patrick-Dewaere (a successor
to the Prix Jean-Gabin), which is awarded each year to the most
promising French actor. Recipients of the award to date include
Louis Garrel (2009), Tahar Rahim (2010) and Gilles Lellouche
(2011). In 1992, the journalist Marc Esposito made a documentary
entitled simply
Patrick Dewaere
to mark the tenth anniversary of the actor's death, with heartfelt
contributions from fellow actors, directors and friends.
The Centre Patrick Dewaere was inaugurated in Lierneux, Belgium in 1995
to provide support for suicidal young adults, and in 2009 a walkway in
the Parc des Promenades, in the actor's home town of Saint-Brieuc, was
renamed Esplanade Patrick-Dewaere. Dewaere's adult film career
was as brilliant as it was brief, a worthy contribution to France's
fine tradition of auteur cinema and an inspiration for other
talented young actors. His name will burn brightly for many years
to come, in the celluloid in which he imparted so much of his own
authenticity and zest for life.
© James Travers 2012
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