Jean-Alfred Villain-Marais (11 December 1913 – 8 November 1998), known professionally as Jean Marais (French: [ʒɑ̃ maʁɛ]), was a French actor, film director, theatre director, painter, sculptor, visual artist, writer and photographer. He performed in over 100 films and was the lover, muse and friend of acclaimed director Jean Cocteau. [1] In 1996, he was awarded the French Legion of Honor for his contributions to French cinema.[2][3]
Jean Marais | |
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Born | Jean-Alfred Villain-Marais 11 December 1913 Cherbourg, France |
Died | 8 November 1998 (aged 84) Cannes, France |
Occupations |
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Years active | 1933–1996 |
Partners |
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Children | Serge Villain-Marais (adoptive) |
Early life
editA native of Cherbourg, France, Marais was a son of Alfred Emmanuel Victor Paul Villain-Marais, a veterinarian, and his wife, the former Aline Marie Louise Vassord.[4] Having recently lost a two-year-old daughter Madeleine, Aline was very disappointed when she gave birth to a boy. She came to accept him but until Jean was six or seven years old his mother raised him as if he were a girl, dressing him like one and giving him dolls to play with. Sometimes Aline was mysteriously absent from home. When he was eighteen, Marais became aware that his mother was a kleptomaniac and that she had been imprisoned for several months or even years in her lifetime.[5]
Career
editEarly films
editMarais' first role was an uncredited bit in Song of the Streets (1933) and he was in Etienne (1933). Filmmaker Marcel L'Herbier put him in The Sparrowhawk (1933) with Charles Boyer; The Scandal (1934), with Gaby Morlay; Happiness (1934) again with Boyer, The Venturer (1934) with Victor Francen; The New Men (1934) with Harry Baur; and Nights of Fire (1937) with Morlay and Francen.
Marcel Carné gave Marais a small role in Bizarre, Bizarre (1937) and the actor was in Abused Confidence (1937) by Henri Decoin; The Patriot (1938), a biopic of Paul I of Russia with Baur, directed by Maurice Tourneur; and Remontons les Champs-Élysées (1938) directed by Sacha Guitry.
Jean Cocteau
editThese were small roles. Marais also appeared on stage. He was in a 1937 stage production of Oedipe directed by Charles Dullin, where he was seen by Jean Cocteau. Marais impressed Cocteau, who cast the actor in his play Les Chevaliers de la table ronde.[6]
Marais appeared in Cocteau's play Les Parents terribles (1938), supposedly based on Marais' home life, which was a great success.[6]
Marais had bigger film parts in The Pavilion Burns (1941) directed by Jacques de Baroncelli, and The Four Poster (1942) directed by Roland Tual.
On stage he appeared in La Machine à ecrire (1941) by Cocteau and he directed and designed Racine's Britannicus (1941). He performed briefly with the Comédie-Française, then left acting for a time for fight in Alsace with the Free French Forces, winning the Croix de Guerre.[6]
Stardom
editMarais' first film as leading man was L'Éternel retour (1943), a re-telling of Tristan and Isolde set in 1940s France, written by Jean Cocteau. It was directed by Jean Delannoy and co-starred Madeleine Sologne. It was popular and made him a star.[6]
Marais was the male lead in Voyage Without Hope (1943) with Simone Renant directed by Christian-Jaque.
Christian-Jaque also directed Marais in Carmen (1944) with Viviane Romance. This was one of the most popular films in France when it was released.[7][8]
Beauty and the Beast and Jean Cocteau
editMarais became a star in Beauty and the Beast (1946), written and directed by Cocteau.[9]
He performed in a popular revival of Cocteau's 1938 play Les Parents terribles on stage.
Marais' next films were The Royalists (1947), a historical adventure film directed by Henri Calef from a novel by Balzac; and Ruy Blas (1948) with Danielle Darrieux, from a play by Victor Hugo and script by Cocteau, directed by Pierre Billon.
Marais' second film with Cocteau as director was The Eagle with Two Heads (1948) with Edwige Feuillère. He did To the Eyes of Memory (1948) with Michele Morgan for director Jean Delannoy, a big commercial success, then Les Parents Terribles (1949) for Cocteau again.[8][10]
Marais was reunited with Delannoy for The Secret of Mayerling (1949), about the Mayerling incident. He did Orpheus (1950) with Cocteau, which was soon regarded as a classic.
Post-Cocteau stardom
editMarais and Morgan were in The Glass Castle (1950) directed by René Clément. Marais did two films for Yves Allegret: Miracles Only Happen Once (1951) with Alida Valli and Leathernose (1952).
Marais was in L'appel du destin (1953) for Georges Lacombe; The Lovers of Midnight (1953) for Roger Richebé; Voice of Silence (1953), an Italian film from G. W. Pabst; Inside a Girls' Dormitory (1953); Julietta (1953) for Marc Allegret with Dany Robin and Jeanne Moreau; the all-star Boum sur Paris (1953); and The Faith Healer (1954).
Marais starred in a version of The Count of Monte Cristo (1954) that was hugely popular.[8] He then made some all-star Guitry films, Royal Affairs in Versailles (1954), Napoleon (1955) (playing Charles Tristan, marquis de Montholon) and If Paris Were Told to Us (1956); School for Love (1955) for Allegret, with a young Brigitte Bardot, a box office flop; Kiss of Fire (1956) for Robert Darène; and The Whole Town Accuses (1956).
Marais did Elena and Her Men (1956) with Ingrid Bergman and Mel Ferrer for Jean Renoir. He followed it with Typhoon Over Nagasaki (1957) with Darrieux; S.O.S. Noronha (1957); White Nights (1957) for Luchino Visconti, with Maria Schell and Marcello Mastroianni; Girl in His Pocket (1958); King on Horseback (1958); Every Day Has Its Secret (1958); and the all-star Life Together (1958).
Swashbuckler star
editMarais starred in the swashbuckler Le Bossu (1959), appearing alongside Bourvil and directed by André Hunebelle which was a mammoth hit launched a new stage of his career. He was reunited with Cocteau for Testament of Orpheus (1960). He played Lazare Carnot in the all-star The Battle of Austerlitz (1960), then was reunited with Bourvil and Hunebelle in another swashbuckler, Captain Blood (1960).[11]
He did Princess of Cleves (1961) for Delannoy with Marina Vlady based on a script by Cocteau. It was back to swashbuckling with Captain Fracasse (1961) for director Pierre Gaspard-Huit, and Blood on His Sword (1961) for Hunebelle.
Marais had a supporting role in Napoléon II, l'aiglon (1962) then did some films in Italy: Romulus and the Sabines (1962) with Roger Moore, and Pontius Pilate (1962), where Marais played the title role alongside Jeanne Crain and Basil Rathbone.
He was reunited with Hunebelle for The Mysteries of Paris (1962), then did The Iron Mask (1962) for Decoin.
Spy films and Fantomas
editThe success of the James Bond films saw Marais cast in an espionage movie, The Reluctant Spy (1963) for director Jean-Charles Dudrumet. He did a comedy, Friend of the Family (1964), then had a huge box office success with Fantomas (1964), playing the villain and hero, under the direction of Hunebelle.[8]
In 1963, he was a member of the jury at the 3rd Moscow International Film Festival.[12]
Marais did Ivory Coast Adventure (1965) directed by Christian-Jaque; Killer Spy (1965), directed by Georges Lampin; a sequel to The Reluctant Spy; and Operation Double Cross (1965), a spy film; then a Fantomas sequel, Fantomas Unleashed (1965).
He played Simon Templar in The Saint Lies in Wait (1966) for Christian-Jaque, and a French general in Seven Guys and a Gal (1967), directed by Bernard Borderie. Fantomas vs. Scotland Yard (1967) was the third and final Fantomas, with Hunebelle.
Marais went on to appear in Le Paria (1969); Renaud et Armide (1969), based on a play by Cocteau; and Le jouet criminel (1969), a short.
1970s
editAfter 1970, Marais preferred concentrating on his stage work, and his movie performances became fewer.
His film credits included La provocation (1970); Donkey Skin (1970) with Catherine Deneuve, directed by Jacques Demy; and Robert Macaire (1971) for French TV.
He was in the miniseries Karatekas and co (1973) and Joseph Balsamo (1973), and did the TV movies Vaincre à Olympie (1977) and Les Parents terribles (1980), based on the play by Cocteau.
He directed stage productions of Le bel indifférent (1975) and Les Parents terribles. He took the latter to London in 1978.[13]
Later career
editHis later work included Emmenez-moi au théâtre; Parking (1985) directed by Demy; Lien de parenté (1986); Les enfants du naufrageur (1992); Dis Papa, raconte-moi là-bas (1993); Les Misérables (1995 film), directed by Claude Lelouch; and Stealing Beauty (1996), directed by Bernardo Bertolucci.[11]
He performed on stage until his 80s, also working as a sculptor. His sculpture Le passe muraille (The Walker Through Walls) can be seen in the Montmartre Quarter of Paris.[14]
In 1985, he was the head of the jury at the 35th Berlin International Film Festival. He was featured in the 1995 documentary Screening at the Majestic, which is included on the 2003 DVD release of the restored print of Beauty and the Beast.[15]
Personal life
editMarais was Jean Cocteau's lover from 1937 to 1947, his muse and longtime friend.[16] After Cocteau's death, Marais wrote a memoir of Cocteau, L'Inconcevable Jean Cocteau, attributing authorship to "Cocteau-Marais". He also wrote an autobiography, Histoires de ma vie, published in 1975. From 1948 until 1959, his companion was the American dancer George Reich.[4] He is rumored to have been among the lovers of Umberto II of Italy.[17]
In the early 1960s, Marais adopted a young man, Serge Ayala, who eventually took the name Serge Villain-Marais. This adopted son, who became a singer and an actor, committed suicide in 2012 at age 69 after an inheritance litigation and bouts of loneliness and depression.[18][19]
Death
editMarais died from cardiovascular disease in Cannes, Alpes-Maritimes in 1998. He is interred in the Village cemetery at Vallauris, near Antibes.[20]
In popular culture
editThe character Tragicomix, in the comic book Asterix the Legionary of 1967, has his characteristics based on Jean Marais.
His life story became the inspiration for the 1980 François Truffaut film The Last Metro.[21]
In 1983, a still shot of him from Jean Cocteau's 1950 film Orphée was featured on the cover of The Smiths' "This Charming Man."
Filmography
editYear | Title | Role | Director | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1933 | On the Streets | Victor Trivas | Uncredited | |
L'Épervier | Marcel L'Herbier | |||
Étienne | Jean Tarride | |||
1934 | The Scandal | the liftboy | Marcel L'Herbier | |
Le Bonheur | Un journaliste | Uncredited | ||
The Adventurer | the young worker | Uncredited | ||
1936 | The New Men | the office clerk | ||
1937 | Nuits de feu | Uncredited | ||
Bizarre, Bizarre | Marcel Carné | Uncredited | ||
Abus de confiance | Marais | Henri Decoin | ||
1938 | The Patriot | Maurice Tourneur | ||
Remontons les Champs-Élysées | L'abbé-précepteur | Sacha Guitry | ||
1941 | The Pavilion Burns | Daniel | Jacques de Baroncelli | |
1942 | Le Lit à colonnes | Rémi Bonvent | Roland Tual | |
Carmen | Christian-Jaque | |||
1943 | The Eternal Return | Patrice | Jean Delannoy | |
Voyage Without Hope | Alain Ginestier | Christian-Jaque | ||
1944 | Carmen | Don José | ||
1946 | Beauty and the Beast | The Beast / The Prince / Avenant | Jean Cocteau | |
1947 | The Royalists | the Marquis de Montauran | Henri Calef | |
1948 | Ruy Blas | Ruy Blas | Pierre Billon | |
L'Aigle à deux têtes | Stanislas | Jean Cocteau | ||
To the Eyes of Memory | Jacques Forester | Jean Delannoy | ||
Les Parents terribles | Michel | Jean Cocteau | ||
1949 | The Secret of Mayerling | Archduke Rodolphe | Jean Delannoy | |
1950 | Orphée | Orphée | Jean Cocteau | |
The Glass Castle | Rémy Marsay | René Clément | ||
Coriolan | Jean Cocteau | |||
1951 | Miracles Only Happen Once | Jérôme | Yves Allégret | |
1952 | Leathernose | Roger de Tainchebraye | ||
1952 | Love, Madame | Himself | Gilles Grangier | cameo appearance, Uncredited |
1953 | The Call of Destiny | Lorenzo Lombardi | Georges Lacombe | |
The Lovers of Midnight | Marcel Dulac | Roger Richebé | ||
Voice of Silence | the former maquis | Georg Wilhelm Pabst | ||
Dortoir des grandes | Désiré Marco | Henri Decoin | ||
Julietta | André Landrecourt | Marc Allégret | ||
Boum sur Paris | Himself | Maurice de Canonge | ||
Le Guérisseur | Pierre Lachaux-Laurent | Yves Ciampi | ||
1954 | The Count of Monte Cristo | Edmond Dantès / Comte de Monte-Cristo | Robert Vernay | |
Royal Affairs in Versailles | Louis XV of France | Sacha Guitry | ||
1955 | Napoléon | Montholon | Sacha Guitry | |
Futures vedettes | Éric Walter | Marc Allégret | ||
1956 | Si Paris nous était conté | Francis I of France | Sacha Guitry | |
Goubbiah, mon amour | Goubbiah | Robert Darène | ||
The Whole Town Accuses | François Nérac | Claude Boissol | ||
Elena et les hommes | Général François Rollan | Jean Renoir | ||
1957 | Typhoon Over Nagasaki | Pierre Marsac | Yves Ciampi | |
S.O.S. Noronha | Frédéric Coulibaud | Georges Rouquier | ||
Le Notti bianche | the tenant | Luchino Visconti | ||
Amour de poche | Jérôme Nordman | Pierre Kast | ||
1958 | La Tour, prends garde ! | Henri La Tour | Georges Lampin | |
Chaque jour a son secret | Xavier Lezcano | Claude Boissol | ||
Life Together | Teddy Brooks | Clément Duhour | ||
1959 | Le Bossu | Henri de Lagardère | André Hunebelle | |
1960 | Le Testament d'Orphée | Oedipe | Jean Cocteau | Uncredited |
Austerlitz | Lazare Carnot | Abel Gance | ||
Le Capitan | François de Capestan | André Hunebelle | ||
1961 | La Princesse de Clèves | Le Prince de Clèves | Jean Delannoy | |
Captain Fracasse | Capitaine Fracasse | Pierre Gaspard-Huit | ||
Le Miracle des loups | Robert de Neuville | André Hunebelle | ||
Napoléon II l'Aiglon | General de Montholon | Claude Boissol | ||
L'Enlèvement des Sabines | Mars | Richard Pottier | ||
1962 | Ponce Pilate | Pontius Pilate | Gian Paolo Callegari | |
The Mysteries of Paris | Rodolphe de Sambreuil | André Hunebelle | ||
Le Masque de fer | d'Artagnan | Henri Decoin | ||
1963 | L'honorable Stanislas, agent secret | Stanislas Evariste Dubois | Jean-Charles Dudrumet | |
1964 | Cherchez l'idole | Un invité au spectacle de Sylvie Vartan | Michel Boisrond | Uncredited |
Patate | Noël Carradine | Robert Thomas | ||
Fantômas | Fantômas / Fandor | André Hunebelle | ||
1965 | Le gentleman de Cocody | Jean-Luc Hervé de la Tommeraye | Christian-Jaque | |
Thomas l'imposteur | Narrator | Georges Franju | Voice | |
Pleins feux sur Stanislas | Stanislas Evariste Dubois | Jean-Charles Dudrumet | ||
Train d'enfer | Antoine Donadieu | Gilles Grangier | ||
Fantômas se déchaîne | Fantômas / Fandor | André Hunebelle | ||
1966 | Le Saint prend l'affût | Simon Templar | Christian-Jaque | |
1967 | Sept hommes et une garce | Dorgeval | Bernard Borderie | |
Fantômas contre Scotland Yard | Fantômas / Fandor | André Hunebelle | ||
1969 | Le Paria | Manu | Claude Carliez | |
1970 | La Provocation | Christian | André Charpak | |
Le Jouet criminel | the nameless protagonist | Adolfo Arrieta | ||
Peau d'âne | "The first King" | Jacques Demy | ||
1973 | Joseph Balsamo | Alessandro Cagliostro | André Hunebelle | 7 episodes |
1976 | Chantons sous l'Occupation | Himself | André Halimi | |
1977 | Vaincre à Olympie | Menesthée | Michel Subiela | TV movie |
1980 | Les Parents terribles | Georges | Yves-André Hubert | TV movie |
1982 | Emmenez-moi au théâtre | George Bernard Shaw | Alexandre Tarta | Episode: "Cher menteur" |
1985 | Parking | Hades | Jacques Demy | |
1986 | Lien de parenté | Victor Blaise | Willy Rameau | |
1992 | Les Enfants du naufrageur | Marc-Antoine | Jérôme Foulon | |
1993 | Dis Papa, raconte-moi là-bas | Guy Gilles | ||
1995 | Les Misérables | Monseigneur Myriel | Claude Lelouch | |
1996 | Stealing Beauty | Monsieur Guillaume | Bernardo Bertolucci | |
1997 | Milice, film noir | Himself | Alain Ferrari | Documentary |
1999 | Luchino Visconti | Himself | Carlo Lizzani | Documentary |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Shelokhonov, Steve. "Mini-Biography". IMDb. Retrieved 11 March 2012.
- ^ Hal Erickson (2016). "Movies". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Archived from the original on 25 March 2016.
- ^ Kirkup, James (10 November 1998). "Obituary: Jean Marais". The Independent. Retrieved 30 May 2019.
- ^ a b Trambouze, Claude. Jean Marais : Un Homme aux milles. PORTRAIT (in French). Retrieved 11 July 2015.
- ^ Jean Marais' statements in the documentary Cocteau - Marais, un couple mythique, directed by Yves Riou and Philippe Pouchain, France, 2013.
- ^ a b c d Jean Marais: [1F Edition] The Times 10 Nov 1998: 21.
- ^ French box office of 1945 at Box Office Story
- ^ a b c d "Box Office Figures for Jean Marais films". Box Office Story.
- ^ "Jean Cocteau's Acclaimed Films". They Shoot Pictures, Don't They. 2016. Archived from the original on 14 October 2017. Retrieved 30 October 2016.
- ^ Jean Marais 'Souvenir' Star Los Angeles Times 23 Nov 1950: A24.
- ^ a b Obituary: Jean Marais: [FINAL Edition] Kirkup, James. The Independent 10 Nov 1998: 6.
- ^ "3rd Moscow International Film Festival (1963)". MIFF. Archived from the original on 16 January 2013. Retrieved 11 March 2012.
- ^ Tourists mob box office – and the theaters thrive: Half the audience Impresario White Musical flaw Difficulty overcome By Sir Harold Hobson Special to The Christian Science Monitor. The Christian Science Monitor 12 June 1978: B10.
- ^ "Berlinale: Juries". berlinale.de. Retrieved 1 August 2011.
- ^ "The Criterion Collection: Beauty and the Beast by Jean Cocteau".
- ^ "Légendes d'Écran Noir: Jean Marais". www.ecrannoir.fr.
- ^ A. Petacco, Regina: La vita e i segreti di Maria José, Milan, 1997
- ^ "Jean Marais, Histoires de ma vie", German Edition 1975 "Spiegel meiner Erinnerung" page 262 ff
- ^ Jean Marais: Son fils Serge s'est suicidé
- ^ Wilson, Scott. Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More Than 14,000 Famous Persons, 3d ed.: 2 (Kindle Location 29906). McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. Kindle Edition.
- ^ L'Epervier and L'Aventurier in 1933
External links
edit- Jean Marais at the Internet Broadway Database
- Jean Marais at IMDb
- Eternel Jean Marais
- Jean Marais at Find a Grave
- Jean Marais at the Films de France