Biography: life and films
In a stage and film career spanning fifty
years, with appearances in around 80 films - from the Golden Age of cinema up to
the upheavals of the 1960s - Pierre Brasseur is regarded as one of the finest French
actors of his generation. Considered by many as the last of the
monstres sacrés
of French cinema, his artistic talents were not restricted just to acting -
he was also an accomplished writer and painter.
His real name was Pierre-Albert Espinasse
and he was born in 1905 in Batignolles, France. Both his parents were actors and
he took an interest in acting from an early age, making his stage debut at the age of
18. He studied drama at the Paris Conservatory, and then under Fernand Ledoux and
Harry Baur. In the 1920s, he mixed
with the artists and poets of Montparnasse in Paris, where he developed a particular interest
in surrealism. However, it was his friendship with Max Jacob and Marcel Dalio which
set him on course for a career as an actor.
Having appeared in a few silent films, he
moved to Germany in 1931 to work at the UFA studios. There he appeared in French
versions of run-of-the-mill films by Paul Martin, Karl Hartl and Kurt Gerron.
He made more headway with his stage career,which included such successes as
On ne badine
pas avec l'amour (1936) and
Claudine à l'école (1937).
The year in which Pierre Brasseur finally
made his breakthrough in cinema was 1938, where he made several notable appearances, in
films such as
Grisou,
Café de Paris and, most significantly,
Le
quai des brumes.
At the start of World War Two, Brasseur returned
to the stage, and went on tour with his theatre company. He starred along side his
wife Odette Joyeux and their five-year old son Claude in the play Domino, with performances
as far a field as North Africa.
In 1942, Jean
Grémillon provided him with the opportunity to give one of his best screen
performances in the controversial
Lumière
d'été (1942). This was followed by probably the most
important role of Brasseur's career, the part of the womanising Frédéric
Lemaître in Marcel Carné's
Les
Enfants du Paradis (1943-1945). This is perhaps the closest that Brasseur
came to portraying himself on screen, an actor playing an actor with an evident love for
his profession.
After the war, Brasseur gravitated to much
darker, more complex roles, including the title role in Christian-Jaque's film
Barbe-Bleue
(1951), the criminally insane uncle in
Les
Grandes familles, the sinister surgeon in Franju's
Les
Yeux sans Visage (1960) and the cruel dictator in Borowczyk's bizarre
Goto, l'île d'amour
(1969).
Other films gave Brasseur the opportunity
to play more humane parts, such as in Bolognini's
Il Bell'Antonio (1960)
and Michel Deville's
Lucky Joe (1964). In René Clair's
Porte des Lilas (1956),
he played a sympathetic down-and-out in one of his best comic performances.
Meanwhile, he was pursuing a successful stage career, one of his biggest successes being
Jean-Paul Sarte's
Le Diable et le Bon Dieu (1951).
Pierre Brasseur continued his stage and film
career throughout the 1960s and even made a few tentative television appearances in the
late 1960s. In 1972, he published his colourful memoirs,
“Ma vie en vrac”
. He died at Brunico in Italy on 14th August 1972, leaving his son Claude to
carry on the celebrated Brasseur tradition.
© James Travers 2002
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