Biography: life and films
Georges-Alexandre Guitry was born in St Petersburg, Russia on 21st
February 1885, the third of four sons (two of whom died in
infancy). His father was the legendary stage actor Lucien Guitry and
his mother the less well-known actress Renée Delmas. He
was named after his father's patron at the time, Tsar Alexander III,
and adopted the Russian diminutive Sacha at an early age. Not
long after his parents' divorce, Guitry took his first stage bow at the
age of five, appearing alongside his father. An unruly student,
he managed to get himself expelled from eleven different schools and
gave up his studies at the age of 18 to pursue the dream of a career in
the theatre.
Once he had established himself as an actor of some repute, Guitry
began writing plays. His first success was
Nono, written in 1905. Two
years later, he married his father's young mistress Charlotte
Lysès, creating a 13-year-long rift between father and
son. The marriage lasted only 11 years. In 1919, Guitry
married a second time, to the actress Yvonne Printemps, for whom he
wrote several hugely successful musical comedies. In the course
of his career, Sacha Guitry wrote 124 stage plays, many of which were
adapted into films. In 1916, he launched the stage career of
Raimu with
Faisons un rêve.
During the silent era, Sacha Guitry had no great love of cinema.
He regarded it as being vastly inferior to the theatre and was in no
hurry to become a film director. He did however make one film
around this time,
Ceux de chez nous
(1915), a documentary celebrating the work of various French artists
(including Auguste Renoir and Anatole France). It was not until
1935 that Guitry deigned to direct and appear in a full-length
film. This was
Pasteur (1935), a biography of
the French scientist Louis Pasteur, which was based on play of the same
title that he had created for his father.
Sacha Guitry's second sound film,
Bonne Chance, was more typical
of the director's subsequent work - an exuberant comedy that showcased
the talents of his third wife, Jacqueline Delubac, who would star in
many of his later films. This was followed by
Le Nouveau testament (1936) and
Mon père avait raison
(1936), after which Guitry made
Le Roman d'un tricheur (1936),
his first masterpiece and most influential film. In these and
most of his other films (many based on his stage plays), Guitry took
the lead role, something that fuelled his reputation as a
monomaniac.
Les Perles de la couronne
(1937) was the first in a series of lavish period pieces depicting
scenes from French history. This was followed by
Remontons les Champs-Elysees
(1938),
Si Versailles m'était conté
(1954),
Si Paris nous était conté
(1956) and
Napoléon (1955), an
ambitious biography on the life of the Emperor Napoléon.
In total, Guitry directed 30 full-length films, including 17
adaptations of his plays and a documentary which was made to accompany
his controversial historical text
De
Jeanne d'Arc à Philippe Pétain.
The fact that Guitry remained very busy as an actor, writer and
director during the Nazi occupation was seen by some as a sign that he
supported the Vichy régime. In fact, much of the work that
he produced during this period had a subtle anti-German slant - his
film
Le Destin fabuleux de Desirée Clary
(1942), ostensibly about the life of Napoléon's fiancée,
can be interpreted as a critique of Nazi Germany. Guitry never
gave permission for his plays to be performed in Germany and on several
occasions he used his influence to secure the release of fellow artists
who had been arrested by the French and German police. All this
was conveniently forgotten when, in August 1944, not long after the
Liberation, Guitry was arrested by a group of resistance members and
incarcerated for sixty days without charge. In the press Guitry
was openly vilified by several writers although he was (three years
after his arrest) cleared of the charge of collaboration.
His reputation tarnished, Guitry resumed his filmmaking career after
the war, beginning with
Le
Comédien (1948), an affectionate biography of his
father. The same year, he released
Le Diable boiteux in which
Guitry clearly identifies himself with the disgraced revolutionary
Talleyrand (another misunderstood patriot). By the early 1950s,
Guitry's health had begun to decline, aggravated by a rich diet and
sedentary lifestyle. Too ill to direct
Adhémar ou le jouet de la
fatalité (1951), he handed over the directing duties
to Fernandel, but was so shocked by the result that he took the actor
to court, and lost. This humiliating defeat merely exacerbated
Guitry's contempt for the legal system and ensured that his subsequent
films would be much darker, much more cynical, than anything that had
gone before.
This is most noticeable in
La Poison (1951), a scurrilous
black comedy in which Guitry attacks the failings of the French
judicial system and the hypocrisy of French society in general.
This allowed him to cast the film actor he most admired, Michel Simon,
in what is easily one of his greatest roles. Far from being sated
by this grotesque farce, Guitry's cynicism resulted in two more savage
satires,
La Vie d'un honnête homme
(1953) and
Assassins et voleurs
(1957). Ill health prevented Guitry from completing his last
film,
Les Trois font la paire
(1955) - bed-ridden, he had no choice but to hand over to
Clément Duhour.
Throughout the last decade of his life, Sacha Guitry remained a
controversial figure, an easy target for his detractors who, because of
the collaboration slur, continued to portray him as a traitor to the
French nation. As often as not, Guitry's films were ill-received
by the critics, although, by the mid-1950s, his work was beginning to
receive a fresh reappraisal. The most fervent admirers of
Guitry's work were the reviewers on the staff of the review magazine
Les Cahiers du cinéma.
These included a young hothead, François Truffaut, who saw in
Guitry the shining example of the auteur filmmaker.
Sacha Guitry died in Paris on 24th July 1957, aged 72. He is
buried at
Montmartre Cemetary in Paris, next to his father Lucien, his older
brother Jean (who was killed in a car accident in 1920) and Lana
Marconi, the last of his five wives. As film directors continue
to adapt his work for cinema and television, and as theatrical
productions of his plays still prove to be popular with audiences
around the world, Sacha Guitry shows no sign of disappearing from our
collective consciousness. Through his many film roles, he retains
a very tangible presence and will doubtless continue to delight
generations to come with his deliciously dry humour and mischievous
mastery of the seventh art.
© James Travers 2013
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