Jean-Paul Belmondo, who has died aged 88, was the actor who more than any other epitomised the French Nouvelle Vague. In Breathless (1960), one of the most influential films of the last six decades, the 26-year-old Belmondo played Michel Poiccard, who steals a car in Marseille, kills the policeman who follows him and hides out in Paris with his American girlfriend (Jean Seberg).What struck one immediately were the thick, sprawling lips â on to which was stuck a Gauloise â the broken nose, and the sunglasses, suit, tie and hat worn as a homage to the great US gangster prototypes, especially Humphrey Bogart. At one stage, Poiccard looks at a film poster, runs his fingers over his lips and sighs: âBogie.âDespite the tough exterior, Belmondo gave the impression of fragility, with his pale, delicate skin and soft voice. The New York Times reviewer found him âhypnotically uglyâ and âthe most effective cigarette-mouther and thumb-to-lips rubber since time beganâ.An Italian poster for Breathless (Ă Bout de Souffle, 1960). Photograph: Snap/Rex/ShutterstockBecause of Belmondoâs relaxed, naturalistic acting technique, it was assumed that the dialogue had been improvised, but it was written by the filmâs director, Jean-Luc Godard, who nevertheless would not allow the actor to learn his lines but cued him during takes. In the final sequence, the camera chases Belmondo as he continues to run after being shot. As he dies, he looks up at his girlfriend, smiles knowingly and says: âCâest dĂ©gueulasse!â (âItâs shitty!â).Because Belmondo projected an anti-conformist image, he was immediately dubbed âle James Dean françaisâ, and after Paul Newman saw him in Paris in the early 1960s he commented: âWhy, heâs one of us.â When Jean Gabin, from the golden age of prewar French cinema, co-starred with Belmondo, the darling of the New Wave, in Un Singe en Hiver (A Monkey in Winter) in 1962, he told him: âKid, youâre me at 20.âThere was even a wave of âBelmondismâ, manifesting itself in a particular style of offhand, narcissistic behaviour. Of his joli-laid looks, Belmondo commented, âHell, everybody knows that an ugly guy with a good line gets the chicks.â At the age of 19, he had married a dancer, Ălodie Constantin. In 1966 while starring in Philippe De Brocaâs Up to His Ears, he and Ursula Andress fell for each other, and Ălodie, the mother of their three children, filed for a way, it is absurd that, following Breathless, Belmondo soon chose to withdraw more and more from the New Wave directors and go into commercial films with few artistic demands â vehicle thrillers, adventure movies and acrobatic comedies, in which he became repetitious and self-parodic. The actor Claude Brasseur remarked: âDespite everything, I think itâs a pity for him making popular films because he could enjoy his mĂ©tier so much more. I remember at the Conservatoire he did astonishing things. Alas, now he has become a sort of stunt man de luxe.âCatherine Rouvel, Mario David and Jean-Paul Belmondo in Borsalino, an American-type gangster movie, 1970. Photograph: Paramount/AllstarWhat was most dispiriting about his career was that French audiences seemed to prefer it that way. When reproached, Belmondo replied: âMy public expects a certain type of picture, and Iâm not going to let them down.â Secure in his pre-eminence, producing many of his films himself, âBebelâ, as he was affectionately known in France, all but guaranteed a hit a year, few of which crossed the Channel or the Atlantic. Belmondo, who did not speak English, never made it to Hollywood, preferring to make American-type gangster movies such as Borsalino (1970), opposite Alain Delon, who shared top place in the box-office polls.âNothing impresses him. No danger, no risk, nothing serious, nothing important, nothing explained,â said the journeyman director Henri Verneuil, with whom Belmondo made eight pictures. âHe never reads a scenario ahead of time. Never thinks out his role. Never says, âHow was I in the last scene?â Never makes suggestions.âHe was born in Paris, the grandson of an Italian workman from Piedmont who had emigrated to French Algeria. His father, Paul Belmondo, was a leading academic sculptor and a professor at the Ăcole Nationale SupĂ©rieure des Beaux Arts, and his mother, Sarah (nee Rainaud-Richard), was a painter. The rebellious Jean-Paul, whose schooldays were turbulent, studied drama at the Paris Conservatory following a brief career as an amateur boxer, and for several years performed in the classics on stage in the provinces before entering the Belmondo and Serge Reggiani in Jean-Pierre Melvilleâs Le Doulos (The Finger Man), 1962. Photograph: The Criterion Collection/AllstarAs Breathless was Godardâs first feature, it was assumed, by some critics, that it was also Belmondoâs. In fact, Belmondo appeared in supporting roles in nine films before his âovernightâ rise to fame. One of his first roles was for Marcel CarnĂ© in Les Tricheurs (The Cheaters, 1958), and the following year his portrayal of Bernadette Lafontâs uncouth Hungarian fiance in Claude Chabrolâs Ă Double Tour (Web of Passion) prefigured the Breathless strong was the impact of his persona in Breathless that his restrained performances as affectionate and humane characters in Vittorio De Sicaâs Two Women (1960), Peter Brookâs Moderato Cantabile (1960) and Jean-Pierre Melvilleâs LĂ©on Morin, Priest (1961) came as a surprise, revealing an actor of a wider range than his subsequent filmography acknowledges. âHe is the most accomplished actor of his generation,â claimed Melville. âHe can play any given scene in 20 different ways, and all of them will be right.âBelmondo made two further films for Melville, both in 1963: Le Doulos (The Finger Man) and LâAĂźnĂ© des Ferchaux (Magnet of Doom). In the former, he suppressed his magnetic charm in the part of a sly, safecracking stool pigeon. But it was Godard who gave him his last great role, in Pierrot le Fou (1965). Belmondo as Ferdinand, dissatisfied with Parisian life, and with his wife, sets off on a picaresque journey to the south with Marianne (Anna Karina), getting involved with her criminal activities on the was a similarity between Ferdinand and Michel Poiccard â both are on the run, both are unable to assimilate into society, and each is betrayed by the woman he loves. However, Ferdinand is a more romantic and intellectual figure, acting out an existential tragedy of the transience of love. At the end, having fatally shot Karina and her boyfriend, Belmondo paints his face blue, places sticks of dynamite around his head and lights the fuse. He has second thoughts, but it is too late. âDamn, itâs too absurd!â he says before being blown Belmondo and Ursula Andress started an affair while they were filming Up to His Ears, 1965. Photograph: United Artists/AllstarWith challenging opportunities becoming rarer and rarer after Breathless, his acceptance of roles in François Truffautâs Mississippi Mermaid (1969) and Alain Resnaisâs Stavisky (1974) reminded audiences of his qualities. In the latter, Resnais cleverly subverted Belmondoâs charm and virility, the source of his success as a popular star, to play the notorious real-life 1987 he returned to the stage to play the title role in Kean, the Dumas drama reinvented by Jean-Paul Sartre, and was an excellent Cyrano de Bergerac three years later, also appearing in Feydeauâs A Flea in Her Ear for his own theatre company at the Théùtre Marigny in Paris. One of his last films to have received an international distribution was Les MisĂ©rables (1995), Claude Lelouchâs effective updating of the Victor Hugo classic to the Nazi occupation, with Belmondo in his most challenging screen role since the 60s as an uneducated ex-boxer who befriends an intellectual Jewish 2001, Belmondo suffered a stroke, which kept him off the stage and screen until his brief return in A Man and His Dog (2008), based on De Sicaâs 1952 film Umberto D. Although he had difficulty walking and speaking, he played a character with the same disabilities. However, no matter what Belmondo did, most serious film commentators would continue to see him as the young rebel who rode in on the New second marriage, to the dancer Nathalie Tardivel, ended in divorce in 2008. Their daughter, Stella, survives him, along with a daughter, Florence, and son, Paul, from his first marriage. Another daughter from his first marriage, Patricia, died in a fire in 1994. Jean-Paul Belmondo, actor, born 9 April 1933; died 6 September 2021
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El mundo de cine se viste de luto por la muerte a los 88 años de Jean-Paul Belmondo, uno de los rostros mĂĄs icĂłnicos y carismĂĄticos del sĂ©ptimo arte francĂ©s de todos los tiempos. Eterno seductor, el popular actor galo de origen italiano no solo protagonizĂł un sinfĂn de tĂtulos sino que viviĂł muy intensamente en lo personal, tanto que su propias memorias las llegĂł a bautizar con el nombre de Mil vidas mejor que una. Nacido en ParĂs en 1933, era hijo de un conocido escultor y tuvo dos hermanos, Alain, productor cinematogrĂĄfico y Muriel, bailarina profesional. Aficionado al fĂștbol y al boxeo en su juventud, Jean-Paul logrĂł forjarse un fĂsico atlĂ©tico y una nariz quebrada que le darĂan no pocas ventajas en su carrera en la gran pantalla, al explotar inteligentemente su peculiar aspecto como pĂcaro y canalla. De hecho, fue apodado como "el feo mĂĄs atractivo" del sĂ©ptimo arte en su paĂs. VER GALERĂA VER GALERĂA Stella, hija pequeña de Belmondo, en el baile de debutantes de ParĂs con las hijas de Julio Iglesias En 1953, se casĂł a los veinte años con la bailarina Elodie Constantin, con la que tuvo tres hijos, Florence, Patricia (fallecida trĂĄgicamente en un incendio) y Paul, pero la pareja acabĂł divorciĂĄndose en 1966. Amigo de otro mito del celuloide francĂ©s como es Alain Delon, Jean-Paul interpretĂł escenas amorosas con grandes estrellas de la Ă©poca como Gina LollobrĂgida, Sofia Loren, Brigitte Bardot o Catherine Deneuve, entre otras. Al parecer, con las dos Ășltimas tuvo algo mĂĄs que una relaciĂłn estrictamente profesional y sus idilios en la ficciĂłn traspasaron la pantalla. Sin embargo, uno de sus romances mĂĄs sonados fue con la actriz Ărsula Andress, la que por entonces era catalogada como "mujer mĂĄs sexy del mundo" gracias a su papel como 'chica Bond'. Sin embargo, fue en 1972 cuando rodando una pelĂcula conocerĂa a Laura Antonelli, con la que estuvo durante 17 años. Jean Paul Belmondo, padre de una niña a los 70 años de edad VER GALERĂA VER GALERĂA DespuĂ©s, el incorregible galĂĄn del cine francĂ©s mantuvo una relaciĂłn con una mujer brasileña de nombre Carlos Sotto Mayor, cuyo fĂsico impresionĂł al mismĂsimo presidente de la RepĂșblica francesa, Jacques Chirac. En 1999, Jean-Paul fue hospitalizado tras sufrir un infarto cerebral y, dos años mĂĄs tarde, volviĂł a sufrir un problema similar que le llevĂł un tiempo a estar en silla de ruedas aunque logrĂł recuperarse bien. En 2002, contrajo matrimonio en segundas nupcias a los 69 con la corista Natty Tardivel, de 41, su compañera desde hacĂa trece años. En 2008, se divorciaba de su esposa y madre de su hija Stella, niña por la que sentĂa autĂ©ntica devociĂłn. Tras la separaciĂłn, se enamorĂł de la belga de 27 años BĂĄrbara Gandolfi, ex 'chica Play-boy' con la que romperĂa en 2012. Sin duda, la vida sentimental de Jean-Paul Belmondo fue de lo mĂĄs agitada, lo que casi darĂa para hacer un pelĂcula de acciĂłn y romance -o serie biopic de varios capĂtulos- como las que Ă©l mismo nos deja en su extenso legado. Jean Paul Belmondo se casĂł en ParĂs con Natty Tardivel VER GALERĂA
Oct 15, 2022 - 7,877 Likes, 26 Comments - Airport Looks (@airport.looks) on Instagram: âJean-Paul Belmondo and Ursula Andress at ORY, 1968â297,280,041 stock photos, 360° panoramic images, vectors and videosEnterpriseLightboxesCartSearch for imagesSearch for stock images, vectors and videosCaptions are provided by our detailsContributor:MARKA / Alamy Stock PhotoFile size: MB ( MB Compressed download)Dimensions:2533 x 3780 px | x 32 cm | x inches | 300dpiMore information:This image could have imperfections as itâs either historical or andress with jean paul belmondo in Up to His Ears,1965Search stock photos by tags Shattuck Military Academy, Faribault, Minnesota, United States (Finished 1943) Stella Adler Studio of Acting, New York, United States. Declined his Oscar for Best Actor in 1973 for The Godfather as he was protesting Hollywood's portrayal of Native Americans in film. Whilst filming the 1962 remake of 'Mutiny on the Bounty' he fell in love with
Jean-Paul Belmondo (fĂždt 9. april 1933, dĂžd 6. september 2021) var en fransk skuespiller, der var en af de markante medvirkende i en rĂŠkke film fra de franske ny bĂžlge og en af de mest kendte franske skuespillere i 1960'erne, 1970'erne og 1980âerne. Blandt hans mest kendte film er Ă
ndelÞs, Manden i mÄnen og En kvinde er en kvinde.
Jean-Paul Belmondo a tirĂ© sa rĂ©vĂ©rence ce lundi 6 septembre 2021 Ă l'Ăąge de 88 ans. Le monstre sacrĂ© du cinĂ©ma français avait vĂ©cu une relation passionnelle avec Ursula Andress. Closer vous Jean-Paul Belmondo et Ursula Andress, 85 ans cette annĂ©e, ce fĂ»t un coup de foudre. 1965, tournage du film Les Tribulations d'un Chinois en Chine, celle qui a crevĂ© l'Ă©cran trois ans plus tĂŽt dans son maillot de bain blanc de James Bond girl et le Magnifique tombent sous le charme l'un de l'autre. La relation amoureuse qu'ils ont vĂ©cu a Ă©tĂ© aussi Ă©lectrique que leur rencontre. Les six ans d'amour qu'ils ont vĂ©cu n'ont pas toujours Ă©tĂ© de tout repos. DerriĂšre l'image d'un couple glamour se cache une passion dĂ©vorante, du dĂ©sir mais aussi des disputes Jean-Paul Belmondo et Ursula Andress, une violente dispute avait Ă©clatĂ©Un soir dans les annĂ©es 60, l'acteur qui s'est incarnĂ© dans des rĂŽles de casse-cou dĂ©sinvolte et Ursula Andress se disputent violemment. Alors que Jean-Paul Belmondo est sorti et a trop bu, elle dĂ©cide de l'enfermer en dehors de leur demeure. L'acteur dĂ©cide de suivre ses habitudes de cascadeur : "Je suis rentrĂ©, il Ă©tait trĂšs tard. J'ai dĂ©cidĂ© de prendre l'Ă©chelle pour monter par la fenĂȘtre. J'allais frapper quand la fenĂȘtre s'est ouverte. C'Ă©tait Ursula qui hurlait 'Tu n'as pas honte?'. Elle a alors balancĂ© l'Ă©chelle et moi avec. J'allais casser les vitres pour rentrer mais elle m'a jetĂ© une boule de plomb. J'ai dit 'on arrĂȘte'», a-t-il racontĂ© au micro d'Europe1 en dĂ©cembre il se sont rĂ©conciliĂ©s aprĂšs cette dispute. Mais quelques annĂ©es plus tard, c'est la fin. Une relation passionnelle pour laquelle l'acteur semble garder beaucoup de tendresse.© BESTIMAGE 2/12 - Philippe Noiret et sa femme Monique, Jean-Paul Belmondo et Ursula Andress Ă Paris en 1972 © BESTIMAGE 3/12 - Claude Rich, Philippe Noiret et sa femme Monique, Jean-Paul Belmondo et Ursula Andress Ă Paris en 1972 © BESTIMAGE 4/12 - Claude Rich, Jean-Paul Belmondo et Ursula Andress Ă Paris en 1972 © BESTIMAGE 5/12 - Jean-Paul Belmondo et Ursula Andress Ă Paris en 1967 lors de la sortie du film "Le voleur" © BESTIMAGE 6/12 - Jean-Paul Belmondo et Ursula Andress Ă Paris en 1967 lors de la sortie du film "Le voleur" © BESTIMAGE 7/12 - Jean-Paul Belmondo et Ursula Andress Ă Paris en 1967 lors de la sortie du film "Le voleur" © BESTIMAGE 8/12 - Jean-Paul Belmondo et Ursula Andress Ă Paris en 1967 lors de la sortie du film "Le voleur" © BESTIMAGE 9/12 - Ursula Andress est sur la terrasse de l'hĂŽtel de Paris Ă Monaco le 28 fĂ©vrier 2015© BESTIMAGE 10/12 - Ursula Andress lors du Festival du Film de Venise le 7 septembre 2015© BESTIMAGE 11/12 - Ursula Andress Ă la soirĂ©e "Doppia Difesa" lors du 12Ăšme Festival du Film de Rome le 1er novembre 2017© BESTIMAGE 12/12 - Ursula Andress Ă la soirĂ©e "Doppia Difesa" lors du 12Ăšme Festival du Film de Rome le 1er novembre 2017
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