Patrice Chéreau


Director

About

Birth Place
Lezigne, Maine et Loire, , FR
Born
November 02, 1944
Died
October 07, 2013
Cause of Death
Lung Cancer

Biography

A much heralded French theater and opera director, Patrice Chereau has increasingly been directing feature films, finding his widest audience with "La Reine Margot/Queen Margot" (1993), adapted from the Dumas novel about the politically expedient marriage between the title character and Henry de Navarre in an attempt aimed at quelching the Protestant tide in France. Chereau began direct...

Biography

A much heralded French theater and opera director, Patrice Chereau has increasingly been directing feature films, finding his widest audience with "La Reine Margot/Queen Margot" (1993), adapted from the Dumas novel about the politically expedient marriage between the title character and Henry de Navarre in an attempt aimed at quelching the Protestant tide in France.

Chereau began directing for the stage in 1964 with a production of "L'Intervention" by Victor Hugo, then became the director of le Theatre de Sartrouville for three years, where he excelled with productions of Moliere classics. In 1969, Chereau made his debut as a director of opera with a production of Rossini's "L'Italienne a Alger" in Paris, which led to his six year (1971-77) as co-director of Le Theatre Nationale de Paris. He took time away from these duties to stage a production of the Wagner opera "L'Anneau du Nibelung" at the 1976 Bayreuth festival, which brought him personal attention. More recently, Chereau directed a 1988 production of "Hamlet" for the Theatre des Amandiers in Nanterre, France and a 1991 version of Botho Strauss' "Le Temps et la chambre." In opera, he has been associated with the works of Alban Berg, notably "Lulu" (1979) and "Wozzeck" (1992).

Chereau segued to films with "La Chair de l'orchidee" (1974), starring Charlotte Rampling in a tragic chase melodrama. Simone Signoret headlined "Judith Therpauve" (1978), a film about the difficulties of a country newspaper. Chereau linked with Claude Berri, who produced "L'Homme Blesse" (1983) and "Hotel de France" (1987), the latter likened to the American "The Big Chill" in that it focused on 10 friends who meet for a reunion. Chereau spent several years researching "Queen Margot," which he also co-wrote with Daniele Thompson, and which increased Isabel Adjani's international fame. He also occasionally acted both on stage (Shakespeare's "Richard II" 1969) and in films. His most prominent roles in the latter medium include portraying the historical figures Camille Desmoulins in Andrzej Wajda's "Danton" (1982) and Napoleon in Youssef Chahine's "Al-Wedaa Bonaparte" (1985). American audiences might recognize him as General Montcalm, the leader of the French forces who allows Mugua (Wes Studi) to swing his savage hand, in Michael Mann's "The Last of the Mohicans" (1991).

Life Events

1964

Made debut as theatre director with "L'Intervention"

1966

Named director of The Theatre de Sartrouville

1969

Directed first opera, "L'Italienne a Alger"; Made stage acting debut, "Richard II"

1974

Made feature film directorial debut, "La Chair de l'orchidee"

1982

Made film acting debut, "Danton"

1991

Co-starred in "The Last of the Mohicans"

1993

Directed and co-wrote "La Reine Margot/Queen Margot"

1998

Helmed "Those Who Love Me Can Take the Train"

1999

Provided the voice for the narrator of "Time Regained", Raul Ruiz's adaptation of Proust's "A la recherche du temps perdu"

2001

"Intimacy", his first English-language film adapted from Hanif Kureishi's novel, premiered at Sundance and later screened at Berlin; engendered some controversy for its frank depictions of sexual intercourse

Family

Jean-Baptiste Chereau
Father
Has two.
Marguerite Chereau
Mother
Married.
Claude Chereau
Brother
Has six; Young is the third child.
Claude Chereau
Brother
Government official. Older.

Bibliography