French
cinema legend Jean-Louis Trintignant dies aged 91
France
24
6/17/2022
Jean-Louis Trintignant, who has died
aged 91, was one of France's greatest actors whose life was plunged into
tragedy by the murder of his daughter at the hands of her pop star boyfriend.
Trintignant was devastated when
Marie, an actress, was beaten to death by rock star Bertrand Cantat in a hotel
room in Lithuania in
2003.
Yet nine years later he returned in
triumph in Michael Haneke's Oscar-winning "Amour", playing a man in
his eighties struggling to look after his wife after a stroke.
It also won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes film festival, where
Trintignant made a final emotional return in 2019 aged 88 despite being
weakened by cancer for a sequel of "A Man and a Woman", the 1966 love
story that made his name.
'Forgiveness indispensable'
Marie's death -- and the subsequent
murder trial -- sent shockwaves through France, where images of Trintignant
sobbing at her funeral won him great sympathy.
The actor had lost another daughter,
Pauline, when she was a baby.
But Trintignant refused to give in
to bitterness. He forgave Cantat, the lead singer of the French band Noir
Desir, when many others could not bring themselves to do so.
"I wish I had never met him,
that my daughter hadn't met him. But she was deeply in love, and he was too, I
think," he told AFP.
Asked if he could ever forgive, he
replied, "Yes... Life is made up of things that escape us, so forgiveness
is indispensable."
Childhood trauma
One of France's best-known and most
prolific actors, Trintignant starred in some 130 films including such classics
as Krzysztof Kieslowski's "Three Colours: Red", Costa-Gavras'
"Z" and Bernardo Bertolucci's "The Conformist".
His willingness to take on such
demanding, difficult and often politically-charged roles has often been traced
back to an early trauma.
Although he was born into a family
of rich industrialists based in the Vaucluse region of southern France on
December 11, 1930, his childhood idyll was shattered by World War II.
He was paraded through the streets
alongside his mother by a mob who shaved her head for "sleeping with the
Germans" the day his home town was liberated from the Nazis in 1944.
In a bitter irony, his father, a
Resistance fighter, returned home in triumph with the American army later that
day.
His family's passion for motor
racing -- his uncle Maurice Trintignant was a Formula One legend -- was also to
play an unexpectedly large role in his career.
Although his first big part was
opposite Brigitte Bardot in Roger Vadim's then notorious "And God Created
Woman" in 1956, Trintignant continued to race cars.
Even being sent as a young conscript
to "pacify Algeria" as the former French colony fought for
independence did not dim his passion, though he was sickened by the
"violent hypocrisy" of the war.
Race driver
On his return he landed a role as a
race driver in "A Man and A Woman". The driver, a widower, falls for
widow Anouk Aimee who he meets as they drop off their children at a boarding
school.
The 1966 love story has gone down in
film legend for the "chabadabada, chabadabada" refrain of its theme
tune, and made them both household names, winning two Oscars as well as the
Palme d'Or at Cannes.
Three years later Trintignant was
himself to win best actor at Cannes for his incorruptible judge in the
political thriller "Z" set in Greece during the military
dictatorship.
He went on to be seen as one of the
most gifted actors of the postwar generation, playing an array of traitors,
thugs and crooks or ambiguous and perverted types.
Yet despite his success and
versatility, Trintignant was a shy and reserved perfectionist, describing
himself as "deeply inhibited with a perpetual bad conscience."
For every role he seemed to create a
new personality, like the complex hero in Eric Rohmer's "My night at Maud's"
(1969) or as the weak-willed man who becomes a fascist flunky in Bertolucci's
"The Conformist" (1970).
Trintignant first married actress
Stephane Audran, then film director Nadine Marquand, with whom he had three
children -- Marie, Pauline and Vincent. The couple divorced and he then went to
live with Mariane Hoepfner, a former race driver like himself.
TRINTIGNANT, Jean-Louis (aka J.L. Trintignant, Jean Louis Trintignant) [12/11/1930, Piolenc, Vaucluse,
France – 6/17/2022, Gard, France (old age)] – director, writer, film, TV, voice
actor, nephew of race car driver Maurice Trintignant (Maurice Bienvenu Jean Paul Trintignant)
[1917-2005], married to actress, singer Stéphane Audran (Colette Suzanne Dacheville)
[1932-2018] (1954-1956), married to producer, director, writer, film editor Nadine
Trintignant (Nadine Marquand) [1934- ] (1961-1976) father of writer, actress,
singer Marie Trintignant (Marie Joséphine
Innocente Trintignant) [1962–2003], Pauline
Trintignant [1969-1969], assistant director, writer Vincent Trintignant [1973- ], married
to race driver Marianne Hoepfner [1944-
] (2000-2011), grandfather of assistant director, actor Roman Kolinka [1986-
], actor Paul Cluzet [1992- ],
actor Jules Benchetrit [1998- ].
The Great Silence
– 1968 (Silenzio/Silenca)
Western, Italian
Style – 1968 [archive footage]
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