Biography: life and films
Jean Dujardin was born on 19th June 1972, in Rueil-Malmaison in the
western suburbs of Paris. He began his adult life working as a
locksmith and glazier in his father's business. After completing
his military service, he set out to make his name as a comic performer
in the bars and cabarets of Paris. He created a popular band,
Nous Ç Nous, with Bruno Salomone, Eric Collado, Eric Massot and
Emmanuel Joucla, often appearing on French television in Patrick
Sébastien's show
Fiesta.
His first brush with national fame came via his role Loulou in the
television series
Un Gars, une Fille,
in which he appeared from 1999 to 2003, alongside his future wife,
Alexandra Lamy.
Having become a national celebrity through his television work, it was
only a matter of time before Dujardin found stardom in French
cinema. His first film appearance was in the anthology short,
À l'abri des regards indiscrets
(2002), followed by a small but memorable role in the comedy
Ah! Si j'étais riche
(2002). In Nicolas Boukhrief's tough action thriller
Le Convoyeur (2004) and
Valérie Guignabodet's comedy-romance
Mariages!
(2004), Dujardin showed he was equally at home in dramatic and comedic
roles. Then came his first major film success,
Brice de Nice (2005), in which
he reprised one of his character creations from his earlier comedy
sketches: a gormless surfer suffering from arrested development.
Attracting an audience of over four million, this was the film that
made Dujardin a star in France.
From Bond Spoof to Silent Hit - and the Oscars
International fame then followed when Jean Dujardin took the lead in Michel
Hazanavicius's spy thriller spoof,
OSS 117: Le Caire nid d'espions
(2006). Not only did this film raise Dujardin's profile outside
France, it also earned him his first César nomination.
Dujardin appeared to be unspoiled by his snowballing stardom,
preferring to lend his services to off-the-wall oddities like Jan
Kounen's
99 francs (2007) than more
formulaic fare. He played against his comedic persona by taking
on more complex dramatic roles, such as the tough but inwardly
vulnerable cop in Franck Mancuso's thriller
Contre-enquête (2007) and
a man haunted by a past love in Nicole Garcia's
Un balcon sur la mer
(2010). His comedy roles broadened out to include France's
best-known comicbook cowboy in James Huth's
Lucky Luke (2009) and an
alcoholic writer troubled by his cancer (in human form) in Bertrand
Blier's
Le Bruit des glaçons
(2010).
Then came the role that brought Dujardin international acclaim and
celebrity - as George Valentin in Michel Hazanavicius's tribute to the
Golden Age of Hollywood,
The Artist (2011).
Despite being a black and white silent film, this was a worldwide hit
and won Dujardin a brace of awards, including Best Actor awards at the
2011 Festival de Cannes, the 2012 Golden Globes and 2012 Academy
Awards. Dujardin is the first French actor ever to win the Best
Actor Oscar (although other Frenchmen, Charles Boyer and Maurice
Chevalier, received honorary Oscars in recognition of their life's
work).
In 2012, Jean Dujardin made his directorial debut in
Les Infidèles (2012),
directing one of a series of provocatively raunchy sketches in which he
appears with Gilles Lellouche. Following Eric Rochant's stylish
romantic thriller
Möbius (2013), Dujardin
made his Hollywood debut in 2013, appearing in Martin Scorsese's
The Wolf of Wall Street (2013) and
George Clooney's
The Monuments Men
(2013). With the actor now only just into his fifth decade,
Jean Dujardin's career appears only to have begun...
© James Travers 2013
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