The Young Girls of Rochefort
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Jacques Demy
Catherine Deneuve
Françoise Dorléac
George Chakiris
Grover Dale
Gene Kelly
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Boat salesmen Etienne and Bill arrive in Rochefort-sur-Mer with a dance troupe and attempt to establish an open-air fair. When their girl friends leave the company, the salesmen scour the city for replacements. In so doing, they encounter twin sisters, Delphine and Solange Garnier, music teachers and dancers. The twins' mother, Yvonne, owns a café and dreams of her old lover, Monsieur Dame, proprietor of a nearby music shop. Meanwhile, the sailor Maxence paints a portrait of the perfect female, and later discovers his ideal embodied in Delphine. Concert pianist Andy Miller discovers the manuscript of a masterful concerto penned by Solange, with whom he subsequently falls in love. The sisters perform at the fair, where they are a great success, but they resist entreaties to join the troupe. Instead, Solange finds happiness with Andy; Delphine meets the adoring Maxence; and Yvonne and Monsieur Dame are reunited. Songs : "Arrivée des camionneurs," "Le pont transbordeur," "Chanson de Maxence," "Chanson de Delphine à Lancien," "Marins, amis, amants ou maris," "Chanson de Simon," "La femme coupée en morceaux," "Chanson d'un jour d'été," "Andy amoureux," "Chanson des jumelles," "Chanson d'Andy," 60036458 "Chanson de Solange," "Chanson de Delphine," "Nous voyageons de ville en ville," "Chanson d'Yvonne," "De Hambourg à Rochefort," "Dans le port de Hambourg," "Les rencontres," "Toujours jamais," "Kermesse," "Départ des camionneurs."
Director
Jacques Demy
Cast
Catherine Deneuve
Françoise Dorléac
George Chakiris
Grover Dale
Gene Kelly
Danielle Darrieux
Jacques Perrin
Michel Piccoli
Pamela Hart
Leslie North
Jacques Riberolles
Henri Crémieux
Patrick Jeantet
Geneviève Thénier
René Bazart
Dorothée Blank
Agnès Varda
Daniel Mocquay
Bernard Fradet
Rémy Brozeck
Daniel Gall
Véronique Duval
Pierre Caden
Anne Germain
Claude Parent
Romuald
José Bartel
Donald Burke
Jacques Revaux
Georges Blaness
Claudine Meunier
Christiane Legrand
Jean Stout
Olivier Bonnet
Alice Gerald
Peter Ardran
Wendy Barry
Sarah Butler
Ann Chapman
Jane Darling
Tudor Davies
Lindsay Dolan
John Macdonald
Keith Drummond
Maureen Evans
Tara Fernando
Sarah Flemington
Johnny Greenland
Leo Guerard
David Hepburn
Bob Howe
Alix Kirsta
Jerry Manley
Tony Manning
Tom Merrifield
Connel Miles
Albin Pahernik
Nicky Temperton
Barrie Wilkinson
Maureen Willsher
Sue Allen
George E. Becker
W. Earl Brown
Ronald D. Hicklin
Frank Allen Howren
Thomas D. Kenny
Judith E. Lawler
Bill Lee
Diana K. Lee
Gilda Maiken
Gene Merlino
Joseph A. Pryor
Ronald T. Reeve
Sally Stevens
Sara Jane Tallman
Robert Tebow
Jackie Ward
Crew
Jean-marie Armand
Jean Barthet
Mag Bodard
Mag Bodard
Maureen Bright
W. Earl Brown
Aïda Carange
Charles Chieusse
Charles Chieusse
Michel Choquet
Laurence Clairval
Ghislain Cloquet
Jacques Demy
Jacques Demy
Luc Durand
Philippe Dussart
Bernard Evein
Christiane Fageol
Marie-claude Fouquet
Alain Franchet
Jean Gaudelet
Joseph Gerhardt
Bernard Gilson
Georges Glon
Gilbert De Goldschmidt
Gilbert De Goldschmidt
Carita-edina Habib
Jean Hamon
Pamela Hart
Janine Jarreau
Hélène Jeanbrau
Bernard Largemains
Odette Le Barbenchon
Michel Legrand
Michel Legrand
Jean-paul Lemaitre
Emmanuel Machuel
Norman Maen
Jacques Maumont
Annie Maurel
Claude Miler
Julian More
Jacqueline Moreau
René Pascal
Claude Pignot
Angelo Rizzi
Michel Romanoff
Christiane Sauvage
Louis Seuret
Claudio Ventura
Videos
Movie Clip
Hosted Intro
Film Details
Technical Specs
Award Nominations
Best Score
Articles
The Young Girls of Rochefort
The new film, The Young Girls of Rochefort (1967), was made in something of the spirit of Umbrellas, albeit with more traditional numbers interspersed with straight dialogue scenes. Deneuve again starred, this time joined by her sister, actress Francoise Dorleac. They play twins living in the southwestern French town of Rochefort, and the story has a fable-like quality, as the sisters give music and dance lessons while yearning for romance and musical careers in Paris. Injecting further glamour into the film are Danielle Darrieux as the twins' mother, Gene Kelly as a concert pianist who falls in love with Dorleac, and George Chakiris as a dancer who comes to town with a carnival.
Kelly and Chakiris, of course, function as links to the Hollywood musical, a genre to which Demy was consciously attempting to pay homage. Kelly was 51 when he made this film, and his dancing is still excellent, though his voice was dubbed. Chakiris later recalled being offered the film not with a script, but with Demy and Legrand playing the entire score for him. Chakiris's manager recommended not taking the role because it wasn't prominent enough, but, Chakiris later told the Los Angeles Times, "I liked the sound of it myself, so I chose to go ahead and do it. I just think it's a film that holds up... It has such charm."
With Gene Kelly's involvement, Demy and producer Mag Bodard were able to secure backing from Warner Brothers, and filming got underway in the summer of 1966, on location in Rochefort. The budget was bigger than on Umbrellas, allowing Demy to use crane shots and other expensive techniques. He even arranged for thousands of shutters in Rochefort to be painted in bright pastel colors, an example of his exacting vision of the overall color scheme.
Demy's collaboration with Legrand was a close one. Legrand later said: "I remember arriving at [Demy's] house in the mornings to work together. He would stand by the piano with a blank notepad, and I would have a blank music sheet in front of me over the keyboard. I would say to myself, for the moment, nothing exists. But after about an hour, or maybe a day or a week, all these sheets will be filled, and we will have created something new. On occasions, all that was necessary was quick riff on the piano to set the creative process in motion." One of their numbers, "Song of a Summer Day," featuring Deneuve and Dorleac, was designed as a clear tribute to the "Two Little Girls From Little Rock" number in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953).
Dorleac had found success as a film actress even before her more famous sister, and she was on the cusp of breaking out into international stardom when she died in a tragic car accident in 1967, at the age of 25. She had completed work on one more film after The Young Girls of Rochefort: Billion Dollar Brain (1967), opposite Michael Caine.
Deneuve went on to a magnificent career and remains one of France's most esteemed and beautiful film actresses. In 1998, looking back on this picture, she told The New York Times, "It's less difficult to watch this film than others with my sister. It was the only film I did with her, but it was a musical. The scenes are so charming and related to what we were as sisters in real life." In another interview, with writer Britt Kelly, Deneuve added: "We were very close, and shooting that film brought us even closer, back to a place and way we had been when we were much younger. Life can give you some terrible knocks, and there's not a happy ending every time. But I do believe in them. I am very optimistic. I am still very romantic about life."
The Young Girls of Rochefort was a commercial hit in France but not in the United States, where a dubbed English-language version was released. Variety said "it has charm, sustained human observation, mixed with catchy music, dances and songs to come up as a tuner with grace and dynamism... An elegant film fable." The film also picked up an Oscar nomination for Best Score. (It lost to Oliver!)
Thirty years later, Demy's widow, filmmaker Agnes Varda, spearheaded the restoration of both The Umbrellas of Cherbourg and The Young Girls of Rochefort, whose original Eastmancolor film stock had faded badly. Varda had been on set of The Young Girls of Rochefort and even shot behind-the-scenes 16mm footage, which she incorporated into her 1993 documentary The Young Girls Turn 25. Freshly restored, The Young Girls of Rochefort was re-released in 1998.
By Jeremy Arnold
The Young Girls of Rochefort
Quotes
I must steer clear of dreary bourgeoisie art, I must be avant-garde and paint what's in my heart.- Maxence
Did he have a camera?- Delphine
No.- Solange
Then how did you know he was an American?- Delphine
How very sad it was the night she fled the scene, she didn't want the name of Madame Guillotine. She had this silly fear that if she went to bed, she'd suddenly wake up one day without her head- Simon Dame
Trivia
Danielle Darrieux is the only actor who actually sings for herself
In some scenes 'Gene Kelly' 's voice is dubbed, while in others it's not.
Notes
Location scenes filmed in Rochefort-sur-Mer. Opened in Paris in March 1967 in 70mm as Les demoiselles de Rochefort; running time: 120 min.
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States on Video September 19, 2000
Re-released in United States August 14, 1998
Re-released in United States September 11, 1998
Film was a sequel to "The Umbrellas of Cherbourg."
Franscope
Re-released in United States August 14, 1998 (Film Forum; New York City)
Re-released in United States September 11, 1998 (Los Angeles)
Released in United States on Video September 19, 2000