Biography: life and films
In a career spanning four decades, Charles Denner was a prolific actor of
stage and screen who was privileged to work with some of the finest directors
of his time. He was born in Tarnów, Poland, on 29th May 1926.
Polish Jews, his family settled in Paris when he was 4 years old. During
the Nazi Occupation of France, still a teenager, the young Charles risked
his life by serving in the French Resistance, for which he was awarded the
Croix de Guerre. After the war, he decided on an acting career and
began studying drama under Charles Dullin. He was soon treading the
boards, performing in Jean Vilar's productions of Shakespeare's
Richard
II and Corneille's
Le Cid at the 1949 Festival d'Avignon.
It was whilst performing at the Théâtre National Populaire in
Paris that Denner came into contact with many other talented young actors
who were destined for stardom - these included Jeanne Moreau, Michel Galabru
and François Périer. Whilst at the TNP, he appeared in
productions of Bertolt Brecht's
Mère Courage (1951), Molière's
L'Avare (1952) and Alfred de Musset's
Lorenzaccio (1952).
He also performed in Albert Camus's adaptation of Dostoyevsky's
The Devils
at the Théâtre Antoine in 1959 and a production of Shakespeare's
King Lear (1967) at the Théâtre de Chaillot.
Charles Denner's first film appearance was in a walk-on-part in Maurice Tourneur's
Volpone (1941). Thirteen years later, he returned to the big
screen in a succession of small roles, in films such as Gilles Grangier's
Poisson d'avril (1954), Yves Allégret's
La Meilleure part
(1955) and Louis Malle's
Ascenseur pour l'échafaud
(1957), before he finally landed his first major screen role - in Claude
Chabrol's darkly comedic biopic
Landru
(1963). Chabrol gave Denner the role after being impressed by his performance
in Jean Vilar's stage production of Bertolt Brecht's
The Resistible
Rise of Arturo Ui. With his sinister features and distinctive voice,
Denner was well-suited to play the monstrous killer Landru, but he also brought
a charm to his portrayal that prevents us from being unsympathetic towards
him. This odd mix of qualities (inspiring both attraction and revulsion)
would be exploited by other film directors, who would often cast the actor
as the sympathetic grotesque. His repertoire included fanatics, criminals,
shady police inspectors, social misfits and creepy romantics.
Even though he preferred working in the theatre, Charles Denner was an immense
screen talent and he brought lustre to a wide range of films in the 1960s
and 70s. Memorable performances are to be found in Costa-Gavras's
Compartiment
tueurs (1965), Claude Berri's
Le Vieil homme et l'enfant (1966),
Louis Malle's
Le Voleur (1966),
Henri Verneuil's
Peur sur la ville (1975) and Claude Sautet's
Mado (1976). But it wasn't until
François Truffaut conferred on him the lead role of
L'Homme qui aimait
les femmes that he reached the pinnacle of his art, playing a man
who (like Truffaut) was morbidly addicted to the opposite sex. This
was the role for which he received his one and only Best Actor César
nomination. Claude Lelouch made the most of Denner's comedic skills,
casting him in no fewer than five of his films, including
L'Aventure c'est l'aventure
(1972). One of the actor's best comedy outings is in Lelouch's
Robert et Robert (1978),
in which he forms an unforgettable double act with Jacques Villeret.
Charles Denner's career was tragically cut short when, in the winter of 1986,
he contracted a lung infection that left him debilitated for the rest of
his life. His final screen appearance was in Chantal Akerman's
Golden
Eighties (1986) and he ended his career with a one-man show in 1986.
After a decade of inactivity, he died from cancer in hospital in Dreux, France
on 10th September 1995, aged 69.
© James Travers 2017
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