Biography: life and films
Fanny Ardant was born on 22nd March 1949 in Saumur, in the Pays de la
Loire region of France. Her father was a cavalry officer, related
to great military theorist Charles Ardant du Picq. As a
child, Fanny grew up in Monaco, where her father was an adviser to the
royal family. She subsequently spent much of her childhood moving
around Europe. She studied political science at the university of
Aix-en-Provence, but her passion for theatre (in particular the plays
of Racine, Montherlant and Claudel) led her to become an actress.
She made her first film appearance in Joël Séria's
Marie-poupée (1976).
In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Fanny Ardant was frequently seen on
French television in a wide variety of made-for-TV movies and
series. These included the prestigious mini-series
Les Dames de la côte (1979),
which drew the attention of director François Truffaut. As
soon as he saw her, Truffaut was captivated by Ardant's unconventional
beauty - her dark eyes, her wide mouth, her triangular face and her
deep voice. He immediately got in touch with her and offered her
a role in his next film,
La Femme d'à côté
(1981). Ardant reciprocated Truffaut's feelings for her and the
two lived the perfect romance, right up until the director's premature
death in 1984. Ardant was the star of Truffaut's last film,
Vivement
dimanche! (1983), a
billet-doux
dressed up as a film noir thriller parody.
Once she had established herself as a film actress in the early 1980s,
Fanny Ardant became much sought-after and was soon receiving offers of
work from some very distinguished filmmakers. André
Delvaux cast her opposite Vittorio Gassman in
Benvenuta (1983), Volker
Schlöndorff gave her an important role in his Proust adaptation,
Un
amour de Swann (1984), and Alain Resnais used her in three
of his films:
La Vie est un roman (1983),
L'Amour
à mort (1984) and
Mélo (1986). She
played opposite Johnny Hallyday in Costa-Gavras's
Conseil de famille (1986) and
Jeremy Irons in Jean-Jacques Andrien's
Australia (1989).
Ardant's obvious sex appeal was exploited thoroughly in the 1990s
notably by Patrice Leconte in
Ridicule (1996) and Gabriel
Aghion in
Le Libertin (2000). One
of her most popular roles was that of the owner of the gay nightclub in
Aghion's hit comedy
Pédale douce (1996),
for which she won the Best Actress César in 1997. In 2002,
she got to wrestle Catherine Deneuve in François Ozon's popular
musical whodunit
8 femmes and she played the
legendary opera singer Maria Callas in Franco Zeffirelli's
Callas Forever.
Since the mid-1970s, Fanny Ardant has also pursued a very busy stage
career and presently devotes more of her time to the theatre, although
she still enjoys a high profile presence in cinema, recently starring
in Claude Lelouch's
Roman de gare (2007). In 2009, she made her
directing debut with
Cendres et sang (2009), an
ambitious period melodrama. She is unmarried and has three
daughters, including one by François Truffaut. In 2002,
the popular singer Vincent Delerm dedicated a song to the actress,
entitled:
Fanny Ardant et moi.
Although she recently provoked anger in Italy when, in an interview,
she described Renato Curcio (founder of the Red Brigades) as a hero (a remark
she later retracted),
she remains one of France's most popular and well-regarded actresses.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.