Biography: life and films
Although first and foremost a stage actress, Emmanuelle Riva achieved worldwide
renown at the start and end of her career in film roles that marked her out
as one of the most remarkable performers of her generation. Half a
century separates these two films, one dealing with the collective guilt
of the Hiroshima bombing, the other with the traumas of growing old and dying.
Between these two exceptional films, Riva's cinema career is pretty obscure
and her talents were far better used on the stage. Originally named
Paulette Riva, she was born in Cheniménil, Vosges, France on 24th
February 1927. She came from a humble background, her family being
descended from Italian immigrants. Her parents wanted her to pursue
a respectable profession as a dressmaker, but she had other ideas.
From an early age, she nurtured a passion for acting and joined an amateur
theatre company in Remiremont. Against her parents' wishes, she went
to Paris to study drama under Jean Meyer, and made her stage debut not long
afterwards, in René Dupuy's 1954 production of George Bernard Shaw's
Le Héros et le soldat.
Emmanuelle Riva's first film appearance was in a small role in Denys de La
Patellière's
Les Grandes familles (1958). Alain Resnais
then gave her the leading role in a film that was to make her famous throughout
the world -
Hiroshima mon
amour (1959). This was followed by significant parts in two
noteworthy WWII dramas - Gillo Pontecorvo's controversial Holocaust-themed
drama
Kapò (1961) and Jean-Pierre Melville's compelling tale
of temptation
Léon Morin,
prêtre (1961). In the latter, Riva gives one of her finest
screen performances as a widow who becomes obsessively attached to a young
Catholic priest (Jean-Paul Belmondo). The following year, the actress
received the Best Actress award at the 1962 Venice Film Festival for her
lead performance in Georges Franju's
Thérèse Desqueyroux
(1962). Franju also directed her in
Thomas l'imposteur (1965).
In André Cayatte's
Les
Risques du métier (1967), another controversial film, she
plays the wife of a suspected child molester (Jacques Brel).
From the late 1960s, Emmanuelle Riva had difficulty attracting film work
that was equal to her talents, so she turned away from cinema and devoted
more of her time to her stage work. She was fortunate to work with
some of the most talented French theatre directors of the time - Claude Régy,
René Dupuy, Georges Wilson, Roger Planchon and Jacques Lassalle -
on a wide range of plays by authors as diverse as George Bernard Shaw, Maxime
Gorki, Harold Pinter, William Shakespeare, Luigi Pirandello, Marivaux and
Molière. It is worth mentioning that Riva also had an interest
in poetry and published three collections of poems:
Juste derrière
le sifflet des trains,
Le Feu des miroirs and
L'Otage du désir.
In the 1980s, Riva occasionally returned to cinema to lend her talents to
some serious auteurs - Marco Bellochio (
Les Yeux, la bouche), Philippe
Garrel (
Liberté, la nuit) - and mavericks - Jean-Pierre Mocky
(
Y a-t-il un Français dans la salle?), Wojciech Has (
Les
Tribulations de Balthasar Kober). In Krzysztof Kieslowski's
Trois Couleurs: Bleu
(1993), she had the honour of playing Juliette Binoche's mother, and in
Tonie Marshall's
Vénus
beauté (institut) (1999) she adds lustre to an impressive
female ensemble. The 2000s began well for her, with a small but memorable
part in Jean-Pierre Améris's
C'est
la vie (2001), which impinges on the same territory as the film that
would again bring her international renown, at the age of 85 - Michael Haneke's
Amour (2012).
Paired with Jean-Louis Trintignant, Riva gives the performance of a lifetime
in Haneke's devastatingly poignant portrayal of a devoted couple facing up
to the unbearable torment of separation and death through old age.
Riva was rewarded with the Best Leading Actress BAFTA and Best Actress César
in 2013. She was also nominated for an Oscar, the oldest actress to
have been recognised with this accolade. After this career highpoint,
Riva has been called upon to appear in six more films, including Sébastien
Betbeder's
Marie et les naufragés (2016) and Dominique Abel
and Fiona Gordon's
Paris pieds nus (2016). Her final film role is
in Kristín Jóhannesdóttir's
Alma. With three
of her films still in production, Emmanuelle Riva died in Paris from cancer,
on 27th January 2017, aged 89. She is now buried in Charonne cemetery,
Paris.
© James Travers 2017
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