Biography: life and films
Raymond Bernard was born in Paris on 10th October 1891, the youngest of three sons of
the successful playwright Tristan Bernard. He began studying drama at the age of
15, and in 1913 he starred opposite Sarah Bernhardt in a stage play
Jeanne
Doré, a part written for him by his father. He reprised the role in
Louis Mercanton's 1915 film adaptation of the play, his one and only significant film
appearance.
In 1916, Raymond Bernard joined the film production company Gaumont, working as assistant
to director Jacques Feyder. He took over from Feyder the direction of
Le
Ravin sans fond (1917), which was scripted by his father. Thereafter, he
gave up acting and pursued a career as a film director. He adapted several comedies
written by his father, including
Le Petit café
(1919) which starred the popular comic actor Max Linder.
Raymond Bernard's
artistic and commercial breakthrough came when he formed the company
Société
des Grands Films Historiques with the writers Henry Dupuy-Mazuel and Jean-José
Frappa. This gave the young director the freedom to make films that were both artistic
creations and hugely attractive to mainstream cinema audiences. These films included
three of the most ambitious French productions of the silent era:
Le Miracle des loups (1924),
Le Joueur d'échecs (1927) and
Tarakanova (1930).
The arrival of
sound was no impediment to Bernard's career. He was one of the few directors to
make a successful transition from silent to sound cinema. Between 1931 and 1934
he worked under contract for Pathé-Natan. Here, he made two of his best known
films,
Les
Croix de bois (1932), a harrowingly realistic depiction of the life of a soldier
during the First World War, and
Les Misérables, a monumental adaptation
of Victor Hugo's great novel.
When Pathé-Natan went bankrupt in 1936, Bernard
couldn't afford to be too selective about the films he made. His films alternated
between humdrum comedies and banal dramas. Then, in the final years of the 1930s,
he made two significant films which presaged the arrival of World War II:
Cavalcade d'amour and
Les Otages. In 1940, racial laws imposed
by the occupying Germans compelled him, a Jew, to give up filmmaking for the duration
of the war. He spent the next five years in obscurity.
After the war, Raymond
Bernard resumed his career with
Un ami viendra ce soir (1946), a deeply felt
reaction to the atrocities perpetrated by the Nazis during the war. He continued
making films for another decade, and had some successes, such as
La Dame aux camellias (1953) and
La Belle de Cadix (1953). Although
many
of these later films were popular, they lacked the humanity, individuality and artistic
flair of his earlier work.
Raymond Bernard died in Paris on 12 December 1977.
Since his death, many of his early films have been restored and more widely distributed.
Consequently, he has acquired a reputation, richly deserved, as one of French cinema's
most important filmmakers.
© James Travers 2007
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