Biography: life and films
A popular and highly photogenic French actress with seventy screen credits
to her name, Danièle Delorme was born on 9th October 1926, in
Levallois-Perret on the outskirts of Paris. Born Gabrielle Danièle
Girard, she was the daughter of the painter André Girard and studied
to become a concert pianist before WWII intervened. After her mother
was deported and her father fled to England, the 15 year old Danièle
moved to Cannes, where she started taking drama lessons from Jean Wall.
It wasn't long after this that she made her stage debut, in Claude Dauphin's
theatre company.
Always one with a keen eye for talent, film director Marc Allégret
noticed Delorme and gave her her first screen roles in three of his films
made during the Occupation:
La Belle aventure (1942),
Les Petites du quai
aux fleurs (1944) and
Félicie
Nanteuil (1944). In 1945, she married the actor Daniel Gélin
and they had a son, Xavier Gélin, the following year; the marriage
only lasted ten years. After perfecting her art with drama instructors
René Simon and Tania Balachova, Delorme appeared in a series of theatrical
productions that included J.B. Priestley's
Dangerous Corner (1947),
Jean Anouilh's
Colombe (1951) and Henrik Ibsen's
A Doll's House
(1952).
After making a memorable impact in a small role on Jean Delannoy's
Les Jeux sont faits
(1947), the actress was invited by Jacqueline Audry to play the
title role in two faithful Colette adaptations -
Gigi (1949) and
Minne, l'ingénue
libertine (1950). These two films made her name
and she soon found herself being called upon to play similar cute
gamine roles - notably as the lead in H.G. Clouzot's
Miquette et sa mère
(1950) and Jean-Paul Le Chanois's
Sans laisser d'adresse
(1951). Yves Allégret's
La Jeune folle (1952) allowed
her to portray a far more fragile and disturbed example of womanhood, and
in
Les Dents longues
(1952), the only film directed by her first husband Daniel Gélin,
she and Gélin offer a poignant depiction of a marital breakdown which
they would soon play out in real life. Delorme made a memorable Fantine
in Jean-Paul Le Chanois's lavish
Les Miserables (1957) and in Julien
Duvivier's
Voici
le temps des assassins (1956) she was cast against type as an evil
schemer, capable of seduction and murder.
It was around the mid-1950s that the actress became fearful of
being typecast as the perpetual ingénue. This led her to move
away from cinema and devote more of her time to her stage career. She
had many productive years in the French theatre, appearing in several impressive
stagings of plays by Marcel Achard, Luigi Pirandello, Paul Claudel, George
Bernard Shaw, Eugène Ionesco and Albert Camus. It was in 1956
that Delorme married the actor Yves Robert - they had met five years
previously whilst working together on a production of Jean Anouilh's
Colombe, directed by André Barsacq at theThéâtre
de l'Atelier in Paris. In 1961, Robert and Delorme founded their own
film production company, La Guéville, which had a number of major
successes including
La Guerre
des boutons (1962) and
Le Grand blond avec une chaussure noire
(1972). The actress appeared in a number of films directed by Robert, notably
Un éléphant
ça trompe énormément (1976).
From the mid-1960s, Delorme appeared in films infrequently, usually in supporting
roles, and from the late 1970s producing was her main activity. She
produced several controversial films, including two films by Jacques Doillon
-
La Drôlesse (1978)
and
La Fille prodigue (1980).
From the 1980s, she made regular appearances on television, appearing in
TV movies such as Jacques Demy's
La Naissance du jour (1980), in which
she played Colette, and series like
Madame le proviseur (1994-9).
In 1984, French president François Mitterrand appointed her a member
of the Economic, Social and Environmental Council (CESE), a post she occupied
until 1994. Her last film appearance was in Jean-Denis Robert's
Sortez
des rangs (1996). After suffering from a long illness, Danièle
Delorme died in Paris on 17th October 2015, aged 89.
© James Travers 2017
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