Biography: life and films
Richard Berry was born in Paris on 31st July 1950. He had a
younger brother and sister and his parents ran an off-the-peg clothes
shop in Boulogne-Billancourt. By the age of 16, he had made
up his mind to become an actor and he cut his acting teeth with an
amateur theatrical troupe that performed classical works. He was
admitted to the Conservatoire, France's top drama school, in 1969, and
graduated in 1973 with the first prize. He then joined the
Comédie Française, where he stayed for the next seven
years. He had bit parts in a couple of films in the early 1970s,
but his first substantial film role was in Élie Chouraqui's
Mon premier amour (1978), in which
he starred alongside Anouk Aimée and Nathalie Baye. He
then appeared in Nadine Trintignant's
Premier
voyage (1980) and Michel Vianey's thriller
Un assassin qui passe (1981),
before taking on his first comedic role in Gilles Béhat's
Putain d'histoire d'amour
(1981).
After this promising beginning, Berry's career took off with a
vengeance in 1982. In this year, he had prominent roles in two
box office hits, Alexandre Arcady's
Le Grand pardon and Bob
Swaim's
La Balance, both of which
allowed him to cultivate a tougher screen image. The same year
also offered him a spectacular misfire, as the romantic lead in Jacques
Demy's
Une chambre en ville, a film
that has gained somewhat in stature since its disastrous first
release. Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Berry maintained a high
profile on French cinema screens, demonstrating his versatility in a
wide range of dramatic and comedic roles.
In 1992, the actress-turned-director Christine Pascal gave Berry one of
his most sensitive and humane roles in
Le Petit prince a dit (1992),
playing the devoted father of a little girl suffering from a terminal
brain illness. This is the only role for which Berry has so far
been nominated for a César. He was on similarly fine
form in Henri Verneuil's final two films,
Mayrig
(1992) and
588 rue paradis (1993).
Another director Berry had a great admiration for was Alexandre Arcady,
who made good use of his talents in many of his films, including
Le Grand carnaval (1983),
L'Union sacrée (1989),
K
(1997) and
Entre chiens et loups (2002).
From the mid-1990s, Richard Berry's talent as a comic actor revealed
itself in a string of colourful comedies which included Josiane
Balasko's
Un grand cri d'amour
(1998), Gabriel Aghion's
Pédale douce (1996) and
Patrick Timsit's
Quasimodo d'El Paris (1999).
In 2001, Berry made his directing debut with
L'Art (délicat) de la
séduction, repaying Timsit by offering him the lead role,
alongside a promising debutante, Cécile de France. He
followed this with another comedy,
Moi César, 10 ans 1/2, 1,39 m
(2003), and two respectable thrillers,
La Boîte noire (2005) and
L'Immortel (2010). In all
four of these films, Berry directed his daughter, Joséphine
Berry. In 2005, Berry donated a kidney to his sister,
Marie, who had been afflicted with Alport syndrome - an act that raised
public awareness in France about organ donation.
The Berry-Timsit double act that had been so successful in
Quasimodo d'El Paris was reprised
in
L'Emmerdeur (2008), a remake of
a French classic directed by Francis Veber, who also cast Berry in
Tais-toi!
(2003) and
La Doublure (2006).
Berry's popular appeal, commitment and versatility continue to make him
an attractive proposition for both established and debutant filmmakers,
and even in films that are far from perfect he seldom fails to turn in
a compelling and truthful performance. In the past forty years,
Richard Berry has appeared in over one hundred films for cinema and
television and, still bubbling with enthusiasm, he shows no sign of
bowing out just yet.
© James Travers 2013
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