Biography: life and films
Yves Robert was a French film director, screenwriter, film actor and film producer.
He was born in Saumur, on 19 June 1920 and died in France on 10 May 2002.
Before he had reached his 20th birthday, Robert settled in Paris to
embark on an acting career. Starting out by performing in
café-théâtres, he made a considerable impression as
a stage actor in the 1940s, appearing in plays by Marcel Aymé,
Jean Anouilh and Jean Cocteau. By the late 1950s, he had also
become a familiar face in French cinema, well-suited to playing
colourful characters with a mischievous or subversive streak.
Marcel Carné gave Robert his first substantial role, that of the
accordionist, in
Juliette ou La clef des songes
(1950), and he was soon landing important supporting roles in such
films as René Clair's
Les Grandes manoeuvres (1955)
and Claude Autant-Lara's
La Jument verte (1959).
Having directed several stage plays, it was natural that Robert should
turn his hand to directing films. One of his first successes as a
film director was
Ni vu, ni connu (1958), which
gave the comic actor Louis de Funès one of his first major
screen roles. This was followed by
Signé Arsène Lupin
(1959), one of the best screen outings for Maurice Leblanc's fictional
thief, and
La Guerre des boutons (1962),
which won the Prix Jean-Vigo and was one of the most successful French
films of all time, attracting an audience of 10 million. Robert
notched up several other box office hits in the 1970s, with popular
comedies such as
Le Grand Blond avec une chaussure noire
(1972), starring his protégé Pierre Richard (whose early
films he produced), and
Un éléphant ça trompe
énormément (1976), one of his collaborations
with the screenwriter Jean-Loup Dabadie.
Robert continued acting well into his sixties, and in Claude Sautet's
Un
mauvais fils (1980) he gave what is arguably his best screen
performance, playing Patrick Dewaere's father. Towards the end of
his career, Robert directed the ambitious diptych
La Gloire de mon père /
Le Château de ma mère
(1990), a lovingly crafted adaptation of Marcel Pagnol's
autobiographical novels that found favour with critics and audiences
around the world. In 2002 he suffered a fatal brain haemorrhage
and is now buried at Montparnasse cemetery. Admired for his
humanity and multiple talents, Yves Robert leaves behind an impressive
body of work which includes the 24 films he directed, many of which
have become much-loved classics of French cinema.
© James Travers 2013
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