Biography: life and films
Jean-Paul Belmondo is one of French cinema's most iconic performers, an
extremely charismatic actor who, in his glory days of the 70s and 80s,
could be relied upon to attract cinemagoers in their millions. In
a career that spans more than half a century, he has worked with some
of France's most distinguished filmmakers, including Jean-Luc Godard,
Jean-Pierre Melville, François Truffaut, Claude Chabrol and
Alain Resnais.
He not only featured in big budget mainstream
films but also lent his talents to more challenging
films d'auteur, a testament to his
versatility and generosity as an actor. Many of Belmondo's films
are now considered classics of French cinema and quite a few are held
in very high regard. As well as being a great screen actor, he
has also pursued a successful stage career and has been a film producer
and theatre director.
Jean-Paul Belmondo was born on 9th April 1933 in Neuilly-sur Seine,
near to Paris. His father was the sculptor Paul Belmondo who
would find fame and fortune after WWII. As the head of the family
struggled to make a living through his art, life in the Belmondo
household was far from comfortable and Jean-Paul grew up as an
undisciplined child. He was inattentive and unruly at school, his
sole interest being sport.
As a teenager, he trained as a boxer but, after a
promising start, he had to abandon notions of a boxing career at the age
of 16 when he succumbed to tuberculosis. His health
restored, he chose instead to become an actor. After a number of
attempts, he finally gained admittance to the Paris Conservatoire in
1952, although his tutors were not overly optimistic about his
prospects. It was here that he acquired the affectionate nickname
Bébel.
In 1953, Jean-Paul Belmondo began his acting career proper at the
Théâtre de l'Atelier, Paris, in two plays directed by
André Barsacq: Jean Anouilh's
Médée
and Georges Neveux's
Zamore.
His film debut came in 1956, with the little-known
Les Copains du Dimanche,
commissioned by the CGT, a federation of trades unions, and originally
intended for private screenings only. Belmondo's cinematic
baptism was to be Marc Allégret's
Sois belle et tais-toi (1958),
a spoof thriller in which he appeared alongside another promising
newcomer, Alain Delon, an actor whose career would follow a very
similar trajectory to his own.
Director Marcel Carné
considered Belmondo for the lead in
Les Tricheurs (1958) but
instead chose Laurent Terzieff, relegating Bébel to a smaller
role. In his next film,
Un drôle de dimanche
(1958), he completed a remarkable quartet with three long-established
legends of French cinema - Bourvil, Danielle Darrieux and Arletty.
It was in 1958 that the 25-year-old Jean-Paul Belmondo attracted the
attention of a former critic turned filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard.
The latter was impressed by the actor's spontaneity and cast him first
in a quirky short,
Charlotte et son Jules (1959),
and then in a highly successful feature which was to prove emblematic
of the French New Wave,
À bout de souffle
(1959).
Between these two films, he had his first leading role in
Claude Chabrol's
À double tour (1959),
although this film was not a great success. The critical acclaim
and popularity of
À bout de
souffle catapulted Jean-Paul Belmondo to national and
international stardom and he was soon courted by some of the leading
filmmakers of the day. Peter Brook selected him to play the male
lead in
Moderato cantabile (1960) and
Vittorio De Sica cast him opposite Sophia Loren in
La
Ciociara (1960). For Jean-Pierre Melville, he starred
in
Léon Morin, prêtre
(1961) and
Le Doulos (1962), and Philippe
de Broca gave him a memorable swashbuckling role in
Cartouche
(1962), alongside Claudia Cardinale, and another major box office hit
with the adventure comedy
L'Homme de Rio (1964).
By the mid-1960s, Jean-Paul Belmondo had established himself as one of
the most popular screen actors in France, triumphing in such diverse
films as the hit comedy
Les Tribulations d'un Chinois en Chine (1965)
(during the making of which he fell in love with his co-star Ursual
Andress) and the thriller parody and existential masterpiece that was
Pierrot
le fou (1965), widely considered Jean-Luc Godard's greatest
film. He made a cameo appearance in the messy James Bond spoof
Casino
Royale (1967) and, prompted by Andress, he considered
pursuing a career in Hollywood, but soon gave up the idea. In
1970, he starred alongside his screen rival Alain Delon in the classic
gangster film
Borsalino, a welcome success
after the failure of Truffaut's
La Sirène du Mississippi
(1969). In 1971, Belmondo created his own film production
company, Cerito Films, which produced around a dozen of his films over
the next decade. He began his relationship with the Italian
actress Laura Antonelli the following year.
Throughout the 1970s, Belmondo coasted along on a tide of
ever-increasing popularity. He became one of France's biggest
stars; his warm charisma and sympathetic tough guy screen persona
effectively made him the Steve McQueen of French cinema. He
insisted on doing most of his stunts, many of which now look like
lunatic acts of bravado - for instance, the long sequence in
Le
Guignolo (1980) in which he is seen flying over Venice, on a
trapeze attached to a helicopter. Whilst there were a few
box office disappointments - such as Alain Resnais'
Stavisky
(1974) - Belmondo was a bankable brand right up until the
mid-80s.
His biggest hits include such prestige productions as
L'Incorrigible
(1975),
Flic ou voyou (1979),
Le
Professionnel (1981),
L'As des as (1982) and
Le
Marginal (1983). Thereafter, Belmondo's popularity
began to wane quite dramatically. Audiences and critics found his
films increasingly formulaic and the actor's decline followed that of
the genre with which he was now most associated, the polar. After
the commercial failure of
Le Solitaire (1987), Belmondo
decided to take a break from cinema and made his return to the
theatre. Thirty years after his last stage appearance, he scored
a notable success in Robert Hossein's production of Jean-Paul Sartre's
Kean at the Théâtre
Marigny. The actor won further acclaim for his performances in
Edmond Rostand's
Cyrano de Bergerac
and Georges Feydeau's
Tailleur pour
dames.
Claude Lelouch's
Itinéraire d'un enfant
gâté (1988) offered Belmondo a welcome break
from the policier screen role that he and audiences had grown weary
of. The film was a success and the actor was rewarded with his
first and only César (although he declined to accept the award
in person). Belmondo went on to appear in a handful of films in
the 1990s, but none of these was a great success, and he focused his
talents on his thriving stage career.
Having given up his stage
work in the late 1990s, he attempted a film comeback with Cédric
Klapisch's sci-fi fantasy
Peut-être (1999) and
Philippe de Broca's
Amazone (2000), but these were
both critical and commercial failures. He achieved greater
success in a television adaptation of
L'Aîné
des Ferchaux, a film which he had previously made with
Jean-Pierre Melville. Ill health prevented him from starring in a
TV adaptation of Joseph Kessel's
Lion
(the role went to Alain Delon) and forced him to give up acting for a
while. He made an unexpected return to the big screen in
2009, starring in
Un homme et son
chien (2009), Francis Huster's remake of Vittorio De Sica's
Umberto
D, although the film was not well-received.
In a remarkable career, Jean-Paul Belmondo has earned the respect and
admiration of cinemagoers across the world. He was awarded one of
France's greatest honours, the Commandeur de la Légion
d'honneur, in 2007, in recognition of his unique contribution to cinema
and theatre. In 2011, the Cannes Film Festival paid tribute to
him by giving him a special Palme d'Or to commemorate his exceptional
body of work. Belmondo's films are still widely seen and
represent some of the best in mainstream French cinema, be they
feisty historical romps, exciting action thrillers or enjoyably daft comedies.
© James Travers 2003
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