Isabelle Adjani
![]() | Bearing a distinctive dark-haired, porcelain-skin beauty that lent itself to the tragic heroines she frequently played, Isabelle Adjani became one of France's biggest and most acclaimed stars in the '80s, winning four Cesars between 1981 and 1994. Of Algerian and German parentage, Adjani was born in Gennevillier (near Paris) on June 27, 1955. She grew up loving poetry and theater, and began acting in amateur stage productions at the age of 12 after winning a school recitation prize. Two years later, she made her film debut in 1970's Le Petit Bougnat while on summer vacation. |
Her second film, Faustine et le Bel Ete (1972), was also made while she was still in school. At the age of 17, Adjani was permitted to join the prestigious Comedie Francaise, where she drew excellent audience and critical response performing the classics. She signed a 20-year contract with the troupe, which she broke a short time later to pursue her film career, and the resulting controversy was be the first of many.
In 1974, the young actress appeared in La Gifle and won the prestigious Prix Suzanne Bianchetti for Most Promising Actress. She became a bona fide star the following year, after director François Truffaut cast her as the tormented daughter of Victor Hugo in L'Histoire d'Adele H. The Story of Adele H., which earned her an Oscar nomination and worldwide acclaim. Many French critics, in particular, enthused over her performance, comparing her with the legendary Jeanne Moreau. Further acclaim greeted Adjani in 1981, when she won the Best Actress award at the Cannes Film Festival for her performances in Possession and Quartet, as well as her first Cesar for the former film.

With the release of L'Ete Meurtrier in 1983, Adjani garnered both her second Cesar and another helping of controversy. Although the film was a box-office hit and created many new fans for the actress, Adjani declined to behave in the manner expected of a movie star; she refused to allow herself to be photographed by the press at Cannes, and avoided interviews and press conferences. She received particular praise for her work in the title role of Camille Claudel (1988), directed by her former longtime companion (and father of one of her sons) Bruno Nuytten; it was also the first film that she produced herself. Adjani won an Oscar nomination and her third Cesar for her performance as the tragic heroine, but she caused more controversy during her Cesar acceptance speech by reading aloud from Salman Rushdie's -The Satanic Verses.
More acclaim and less controversy followed for the actress in 1994, when she won her fourth Cesar for her portrayal of the title character in La Reine Margot. A subsequent -- and uncharacteristic -- Hollywood outing, the 1996 remake of Diabolique, proved a disappointment, and, for the next couple of years, Adjani receded from view. However, she was no less respected in her homeland, where she was appointed president of the 50th Cannes Film Festival in 1997.
She also continued to be highly visible on the political scene, staunchly supporting Algerian rebel activities and actively fighting racism against North African immigrants (such as her father) in France. She was particularly outspoken concerning the activities of the French National Front. In 1986, the anti-immigration group organized a smear campaign against her, starting rumors that she was dying of AIDS. This actually resulted in newspaper reports of Adjani's death, which caused her to go on national television to prove that she was, in fact, still alive.

Adauga un comentariu
Alte informatii din Cinematography - the seventh art
During the 1970s, an era widely recognized as a renaissance period of American moviemaking, few directors enjoyed greater prominence than Robert Altman. An iconoclast whose work acutely attacked the conventions of genre filmmaking, Altman both satirized and revitalized such warhorses as the western, the musical, and the crime drama, waging war on the sterile artifice of mainstream storytelling by creating a singularly sprawling and deliberately messy cinematic world bursting at the ...
A sultry, enigmatic leading lady of several classic European films of the 1950s and 60s, Aimee, the daughter of a French theatrical family, studied acting and dancing in her native France and England before making her film debut at age 14 in "La Maison sous la mer" (1946). She first gained notice in a Juliet-like role in Andre Cayatte's "Les Amants de Verone/The Lovers of Verona" (1948) and a string of starring roles followed in which she worked in Italy, Britain and West Germany ...
Sophie Marceau (nee Sophie Maupu) was born November 17, 1966, in Paris, France. Sophie Marceau began acting in films at 14. Up until that point, she grew up far away from studios spots. Back then, she was living in the Paris suburbs and her father was a truck driver. At that time, she learned from one of her friends that Claude Pinoteau (French director) was looking for new faces, for a teenagers movie call La Boum. This movie turned out to be a huge success. This led to the sequel La Boum 2 ...
An actor of unusual talent, Edward Norton attained almost instant stardom with his film debut 1996's Primal Fear. For his thoroughly chilling breakthrough performance as a Kentucky altar boy accused of murder, Norton was credited with saving an otherwise mediocre film and further rewarded with Golden Globe and Oscar nominations. Remarkably disconnected from all of the hype that is usually associated with fresh talent, Norton has gone on to further prove his worth in such films as ...
Born Juan Moreno on July 30, 1948 in Casablanca, Morocco to Spanish parents. Juan Moreno eventually changed his name to Jean Reno. Reno had fond memories of his childhood in Morocco. He spent his early days with five of his good friends at the beach, escaping from the heat of the Moroccan day. Reno also spent his days watching American actors like John Wayne, William Holden, Marlon Brando and Jimmy Stewart and French actors like Jean Gabin and Louis Jouvet. These early days were ruined ...
Choose language: RO | EN Web Directory

We Recommend
The oldest civilization in the world
Often the word civilisation is used synonymously with the term culture in academic circles and also in the popular ones. Every human being participate in the composition of a culture that is defined by customs, ...

Google Ads
Artline Info
BUCHAREST, March 8th, 2010 : FELIX VOGEL, the appointed curator of BUCHAREST BIENNALE 4 will held a press conference to reveal the list of artists participating in BUCHAREST BIENNALE 4. The press conference was held at PAVILION UNICREDIT - center for ... Read article
Translating time: Losses and Gains
Press conference to reveal the list of artists participating in BUCHAREST BIENNALE 4
Exploring the return of repression
After Communism: Achievement and Disillusionment since 1989
Movies. Theatre. Concerts
Leo Iorga and Pacifica will perform at Hard Rock Cafe
Saturday, 22 february, at Hard Rock Cafe you will have the opportunity to participate to a fascinating event with a special guest, Leo Iorga an his band, Pacifica. Read article
Haiti Charity concert at the Palace Hall in Bucharest
GLAM ROCK / GLITTER PUNK PARTY, Pavilion 10 years of resistance
Madalin Luca, electronic, experimental sounds and pan-pipe concert
The weekly folk night in club Mojo

Books
Author: Anne Cardwell Masthead: Harnlyn Year: 2010 With these unique mosaic projects you can customize your home and garden. These fine pieces of art where created using everything from ready-made mosaic tiles in glass and ceramic to salvaged materials ... Read article
Start to finish - MOTOR BOATING
The Universe - From ancient Babylon to the Big Bang

Newsletter
Today's Persons

Benchmark in Romanian Art
Pavel Alaszu, Romanian painter and illustrator
Foto: Wikimedia.org Paul Alaszu, Romanian painter and illustrator, was born on 11 november 1942, in Timisoara. He studied at the Faculty of Fine Arts at the University of Timisoara, the 1968 promotion. He had professors as Peter Jecsa and Romul Nutiu, ...
Gheorghe Adoc, Romanian sculpturer
Foto:Wikimedia.org From all of his works, the most representative is The Independence Statue from Iasi, located in the market with the same name. It was unveiled in 1980, and was a project that belonged also to Gheorghe Adoc's wife, Gabriela ...
Nutzi Acontz, Romanian paintress
Nutzi Acontz was a Romanian paintress born on 16th November 1894, in Focsani, Vrancea county. She died in Bucharest on 19th December 1957, after a life dedicated to art. She studied at the Fine Arts School in Iasi, this county being also the place of ...
The artist's works have been unanimously noted with eulogies; Thus underscoring the state-ment of a connoisseur: Here is Marcel Guguianu - another originalsculptor from the Romanian Carpathians who knows authoritatively onAmerica's door.” MOLLIE ...

Photo Gallery
Dictionaries
Greatest artists Actors Universal Poetry










