Biography: life and films
Jacques Dutronc was born in Paris on the 28th April 1943. The son
of an engineering professor, he grew up in the capital's ninth
arrondissement, which allowed him to nurture his passion for
cinema. However, his main passion was rock music, and he devoted
much of his adolescent years to his guitar playing. In his late
teens, he formed a band,
El Toro et
les Cyclones, and was subsequently hired as an assistant
artistic director by the record company Vogue. The success of his
first record
Et moi, et moi, et moi
in 1966 instantly established him as one of France's leading pop
musicians. In 1967, he began living with the singer
Françoise Hardy, with whom he would have a son, Thomas, and
marry in 1981.
It was with great reluctance that Jacques Dutronc made his entry into
cinema. After four years of gentle persuasion he finally agreed
to make his film debut in Jean-Marie Périer's
Antoine et Sébastien (1973),
starring alongside veteran actor François Périer.
This was immediately followed by Claude Vital's comedy thriller
OK
patron (1974), for which Dutronc supplied the score and
theme song,
L'Aventurier,
later released as a single. It was in this film that Dutronc
found the kind of role with which he appeared most comfortable, that of
the sympathetic hoodlum - the very role Claude Lelouch reserved for him
in
Le Bon et les méchants
(1976). In Andrzej Zulawski's
L'Important c'est d'aimer
(1975), he appeared alongside Romy Schneider in a more fragile role,
giving a performance that established his credentials as a serious film
actor.
Throughout his career, Jacques Dutronc was happy to cultivate the image
of a carefree dilettante, whether it be his film work or his
music. In both arenas, he was phenomenally successful and widely
respected, and not only in his native France. His talents as an
actor were eagerly sought after by directors, including some of great
renown. Jean-Luc Godard chose him to play his alter ego in
Sauve qui peut (la vie) (1980);
Alain Jessua partnered him with Patrick Dewaere in
Paradis pour tous (1982); and
Barbet Schroeder gave him one of his most substantial screen roles,
that of an inveterate gambler, in
Tricheurs
(1984). It was as the lead in Maurice Pialat's
Van
Gogh (1991) that Dutronc gave what is considered his finest
screen performance, in a role that won him the Best Actor César
in 1992. This was followed by an enigmatic turn as a shady
villain in Michel Deville's slightly deranged thriller
Toutes peines confondues
(1992).
From the mid-1990s, Jacques Dutronc's appearances in cinema became less
frequent, but he always brought great quality and value to the films
that bore his name. There is a delectable mystique about his
presence in Claude Chabrol's moody thriller
Merci pour le chocolat (2000),
and his portrayal of a man stricken with a terminal illness in
Jean-Pierre Améris's
C'est la vie (2001) is
harrowingly true to life. Alas, his subsequent film appearances
have not had quite the same impact, but his presence on the big screen
is always appreciated, whether it be in off-the-wall mainstream
comedies like Gabriel Aghion's
Pédale
dure (2004) or hard-hitting dramas such as Xavier De Choudens's
Joseph et la fille (2010).
Dutronc may consider himself a dilettante but there is nothing remotely
amateurish about his work, most of which shows an acute sensitivity and
thoughtful intelligence. A talented singer and an accomplished
actor, we should perhaps forgive him his false modesty.
© James Travers 2013
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