Biography: life and films
It is a testament to Antoine Chappey's skill as an actor that you hardly notice him
in many of the films he has appeared in. This is not because
he lacks charisma but because he is so remarkably adept at creating characters
that fit their milieux - whether that is in the police service or on a French
housing estate - that you have no reason to notice him. When he is
given more substantial roles, and, more recently, the leading role in a film,
he never comes across as an actor playing a part. He always is the
character he is portraying, and there is an authenticity and tangibility
to his screen portrayals that sets him apart from most screen actors today.
Instead of chasing after stardom, Chappey has made an admirable career as
the consummate character actor, working mainly with serious filmmakers who
can make the best use of his immense talents.
Born in 1960, Antoine Chappey started out as a musician before he made his screen
debut in Patrick Grandperret's
Mona et Moi (1989). Here he played
a character that he resembled in real-life - a secondhand bookseller and
bass player. His acting career got started when Cédric Klapisch
gave him some small roles in a number of his films -
Riens du tout (1991),
Le Péril jeune (1993),
Chacun cherche son chat
(1996). In Xavier Durringer's debut film
La Nage indienne (1993),
he formed a romantic triangle with Karin Viard and Gérald Laroche
in what resembles a 1990s version of Truffaut's
Jules et Jim (1962).
That same year, he took on one of his most memorable roles as an unsavoury
Parisian who pursues a perverse relationship with a naive girl from the provinces
(Margot Abascal) in Laurent Tuel's
Le Rocher d'Acapulco (1993).
Then Chappey played a very different character in Lucas Belvaux's comedy
Pour rire! (1994), showing that
he was also a capable comic actor as well as a gifted dramatic performer.
He combined comedy and pathos brilliantly in Stéphane Brizé's
Le Bleu des villes
(1999) and made a great impact as an ordinary man at war with his brother
(Benoît Magimel) in Xavier Beauvois's
Selon Matthieu (2000).
Chappey also added lustre to a later Beauvois film,
Le Petit lieutenant
(2005), stealing our sympathies as a committed cop whose world suddenly collapses
in on him.
Antoine Chappey has worked with a wide range of filmmakers, including well-regarded
or débutants auteurs - Claire Denis on
J'ai pas sommeil (1993),
Manoel de Oliveira on
Je
rentre à la maison (2000) and François Ozon on
5x2 (2003). He shows up briefly
in Dany Boon's first feature as a director,
La Maison du bonheur
(2006), Gérald Hustache-Mathieu's idsiosyncratic thriller
Poupoupidou (2011) and also
Yves Caumon's
Cache-cache (2004). Other notable directors he
has worked with include Rachid Bouchareb (
Indigènes (2006)), Roschdy
Zem (
Mauvaise foi (2006))
and Safy Nebbou (
L'Empreint
(2008)).
In René Féret's
Le Prochain film (2013), Chappey played
the on-screen partner to Marilyne Canto, who is also his partner in real
life. The couple had already worked together - on Hervé Le Roux's
On appelle ça...
le printemps (2001) and Dominique Cabrera's
Le Lait de la tendresse
humaine (2001) - and would again play screen lovers in Canto's partly
autobiographical film,
Le
Sens de l'humour (2013). Whilst Chappey has been busiest working
for the cinema, he has also lent his talents to television, appearing in
a number of series such as
Le Grand Patron (2003),
Cellule identité
(2008),
Maison close (2010) and
La vie devant elles (2015).
He has also appeared in some television movies, including
Au nom des fils
(2014) and
Diabolique (2016).
© James Travers 2017
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