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André Delvaux

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

André Delvaux
Born
André Albert Auguste Delvaux

(1926-03-21)21 March 1926
Heverlee, Belgium
Died4 October 2002(2002-10-04) (aged 76)
Valencia, Spain
OccupationFilm director

André Albert Auguste Delvaux (French: [dɛlvo]; 21 March 1926 – 4 October 2002) was a Belgian film director. He co-founded the film school INSAS in 1962 and is regarded as the founder of the Belgian national cinema. Adapting works by writers such as Johan Daisne, Julien Gracq and Marguerite Yourcenar, he received international attention for directing magic realist films.

Delvaux received the Louis Delluc Prize for Rendezvous at Bray (1971) and the André Cavens Award for Woman Between Wolf and Dog (1979) and The Abyss (1988). The king of Belgium made him a baron in 1996. The Académie André Delvaux is named after him and he posthumously received the first Honorary Magritte Award [fr] in 2011.

Early life and education

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André Albert Auguste Delvaux was born in Heverlee, Belgium, on 21 March 1926.[1] He studied piano at the Royal Conservatory of Brussels and worked as a silent film pianist at the Belgian cinématheque in his early 20s. He studied law and took a degree in German philology at the Free University of Brussels, after which he worked as a teacher.[2]

Filmmaking career

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Delvaux's filmmaking career started in 1954[3] when he began to make television documentaries about film directors for the broadcaster RTB. Notably, he made a four-part series about Federico Fellini in 1960.[2] In 1959 he co-directed a short fiction film with Jean Brismée [fr], La Planète fauve.[3] In 1962 he co-founded the film school INSAS in Brussels and became the director of its directing department. From that point cinema was his primary occupation.[4]

Delvaux's first two feature films were based on books by Johan Daisne.

Delvaux received international attention for his first feature film, The Man Who Had His Hair Cut Short (1965), which is based on Johan Daisne's novel with the same title.[2] It was followed by another Daisne adaptation, One Night... A Train, in 1968. His first colour film, it shares several elements with the previous film: an uncomfortable teacher, a tragic ending and a confrontation between love and death.[5] Rendezvous at Bray (1971), loosely based Julien Gracq's novella King Cophetua, is set during World War I and places great emphasis on atmosphere. The film stars Mathieu Carrière, Roger Van Hool, Bulle Ogier and Anna Karina, and became a turning point in Delvaux's career, because its critical success allowed him to choose his subjects more freely.[5]

Belle (1973) is about an affair with a mistress who may or may not be imaginary.[2] Woman Between Wolf and Dog (1979), set in German-occupied Flanders during World War II, is among Delvaux's more realist films. It is about a woman who is torn between the Belgian Resistance and her collaborationist husband.[2] The painterly Benvenuta (1983), based on Suzanne Lilar's book La Confession anonyme, plays with reality and imagination through a story about a screenwriter who adapts a novel for film.[2][5] Delvaux's last feature film was his largest project, The Abyss (1988). The film is an episodic drama set in 16th-century Europe and based on a book by Marguerite Yourcenar.[2] Like Belle and Woman Between Wolf and Dog before it, The Abyss played in the main competition of the Cannes Film Festival. Delvaux's final short film, 1001 films, was shown as a special screening at the 1989 Cannes Film Festival.[6]

Cinematic style

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From the release of The Man Who Had His Hair Cut Short, Delvaux was associated with magic realism and known for his portrayals of dreams and reality.[7] Aligning himself with a tradition that involved painters such as Hieronymus Bosch, René Magritte and Paul Delvaux,[2] he proclaimed and expressed a "belgitude" connected to magic realism.[8] Delvaux's assertion of a distinctive Belgian identity, separate from French cinema, gave him status as the founder of the country's national film industry.[9] The visuals in some of his films have tendencies of surrealism, which is distinct from the deliberately constructed magic realism by being based on Freudian fetishism and automatism. In his application of these tendencies, Delvaux was closer to Magritte and Gracq than to André Breton or Luis Buñuel.[8] Two important collaborators were the cinematographer Ghislain Cloquet, who worked on Delvaux's first four feature films,[2] and the composer Frédéric Devreese, who provided original music throughout his career.[8]

Personal life

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Delvaux died from a heart attack on 4 October 2002, while he was in Valencia to speak at the World Arts Meeting.[7] His daughter Catherine Delvaux has been engaged in making his films available on home media.[10]

Selected filmography

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Awards and honours

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The Man Who Had His Hair Cut Short received the British Film Institute's Sutherland Trophy in 1966 for being "the most original and imaginative film premiered at the National Film Theatre during the year".[11] Rendezvous at Bray was awarded the Louis Delluc Prize in 1971.[5] The Belgian Film Critics Association gave Delvaux its André Cavens Award for Belgian film of the year twice, for Woman Between Wolf and Dog and The Abyss.[12]

Delvaux received the Plateau Life Achievement Award at the 1991 Film Fest Ghent.[7] In 1996 he was knighted by King Albert II of Belgium and given the personal title of baron.[1] He was made an honorary doctor by the Université libre de Bruxelles and received the Order of the Crown of the Officer class.[1] The Académie André Delvaux is named after him and was created in 2010 with his daughter's involvement. It works to promote French-language Belgian cinema and is responsible for the Magritte Awards.[13] Delvaux received a posthumous Honorary Magritte Award [fr] at the 1st Magritte Awards in 2011.[14]

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Delvaux, André". Adelbrieven / Lettres patentes de noblesse: 1993–2000 (in Dutch and French). Tielt: Uitgeverij Lannoo and Éditions Racine. 2001. p. 98. ISBN 90-209-4523-8.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Bergan, Ronald (8 October 2002). "André Delvaux". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  3. ^ a b Mosley, Philip (2001). Split Screen: Belgian Cinema and Cultural Identity. Albany, New York: State University of New York Press. p. 80. ISBN 0-7914-4747-2.
  4. ^ Brismée, Jean (1995). Cinema: One Hundred Years Movies in Belgium. Liège: Mardaga [fr]. p. 125. ISBN 2-87009-607-0.
  5. ^ a b c d Louis, Théodore (5 October 2002). "André Delvaux, un artiste complet et raffiné". La Libre Belgique (in French). Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  6. ^ "André Delvaux". Cannes Film Festival. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
  7. ^ a b c Stern, Andy (7 October 2002). "Andre Delvaux". Variety. Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  8. ^ a b c Colville, Georgiana M. M. (2006). "Between Surrealism and Magic Realism: The Early Feature Films of André Delvaux". In Conley, Katharine; Taminiaux, Pierre (eds.). Surrealism and Its Others. Yale French Studies. Vol. 109. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. pp. 127–128. ISBN 0-300-11072-3.
  9. ^ "André Delvaux". The Times. 19 October 2002. Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  10. ^ Vlaeminckx, Jean-Michel (13 September 2010). "L'Oeuvre au noir d'André Delvaux". Cinergie [fr] (in French). Retrieved 27 February 2022.
  11. ^ Rayns, Tony (10 February 2012). "Lost and found: The Man Who Had His Hair Cut Short". British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 27 February 2022. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
  12. ^ Hammer, Tad Bentley (1991). International Film Prizes: An Encyclopedia. The Garland reference library of the humanities. Vol. 1333. New York City: Garland. p. 38. ISBN 0-8240-7099-2.
  13. ^ Tonton René (20 January 2016). "Les belles histoires de Tonton René: la naissance des Magritte du Cinéma". Cinevox (in French). Retrieved 27 February 2022.
  14. ^ Belga (6 February 2011). "La première cérémonie des Magritte du cinéma a vu le sacre de 'Mr. Nobody'" (in French). RTBF. Retrieved 25 February 2022.

Further reading

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  • Agel, Henri; Marty, Joseph (1996). André Delvaux : de l'inquiétante étrangeté à l'itinéraire initiatique. Lausanne: Âge d'Homme. ISBN 978-2-8251-0737-9.
  • Mosley, Philip (1994). "From Book to Film: André Delvaux's alchemy of the image". The French Review. 67: 813–823.
  • Nysenhole, Adolphe, ed. (1985). André Delvaux ou les visages de l'imaginaire. Brussels: Editions de l'Université de Bruxelles.
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