Jean-Claude Brialy


Jean-Claude Brialy was a French actor and film director.

Early life

Brialy was born in Aumale, French Algeria, where his father was stationed with the French Army. Brialy moved to mainland France with his family in 1942. He was an alumnus of the Prytanée National Militaire. When he was 21 years old, he went to Paris to work as an actor.

Career

In 1956, Brialy acted in his first role in the short film Le coup du berger by Jacques Rivette.
By the late 1950s, he'd become one of the most prolific actors in the French nouvelle vague and a star. He appeared in films of nouvelle vague directors such as Claude Chabrol, Louis Malle, François Truffaut, Jean-Luc Godard,, Éric Rohmer, as well as in films of other filmmakers such as Jean Renoir, Roger Vadim, Philippe de Broca, Luis Buñuel, and Claude Lelouch.
Accustomed to supporting roles, he starred in Le Beau Serge in 1957, La Chambre ardente in 1962, Carambolages in 1963, L'Année sainte in 1976, and Julie pot de colle the following year, but never managed to establish himself as a leading man like Alain Delon or Jean-Paul Belmondo. He made up to ten films a year in the 1960s.
In 2006, he appeared in his last role, as the eponymous character of the TV film Monsieur Max, directed by Gabriel Aghion. Godard described him as "the French Cary Grant," while Brialy's self-described "life models" had reportedly been actor Sacha Guitry and director Jean Cocteau.
Brialy directed a number of films, including Églantine in 1971, which was loosely inspired by his own memories of a happy childhood spent in Chambellay with his grandparents, and Les volets clos in 1972.
He owned the restaurant L'Orangerie, on the Île Saint-Louis; he'd also worked as a TV presenter, a singer, and a radio host. During the presentation of one of his books, Brialy described himself this way: "I'm a boy who got lucky enough to do what I love in life".

Personal life and death

Brialy, in 1959, acquired a château in the commune of Monthyon, near Paris. There, he accommodated and entertained many friends from the cinema and the theatre, such as Jean Marais, Pierre Arditi, and Romy Schneider whom he'd met during the 1958 production of the film Christine. Schneider, after the 1981 fatal accident of her son David, found a "refuge from the paparazzi" in Brialy's home. French singer Barbara would often sing at the piano. Director Jean-Pierre Melville used the château to shoot the last scenes of his 1970 crime film Le Cercle Rouge, where Alain Delon and Yves Montand are killed by the police.
In his books, the autobiographical Le Ruisseau des singes and the memoir J'ai oublié de vous dire, Brialy revealed that, despite early affairs with women, he was gay.
Brialy died on 30 May 2007, in his Monthyon home, after a long time with cancer. He bequeathed his Monthyon estate to the commune of Meaux, near Monthyon, with the following codicil: that the Meaux authorities would finance the estate's maintenance as long as his partner, Bruno Finck would reside there. In the summer of 2020, Finck left the estate and, for "health reasons," moved to the south of France, upon which time the commune of Meaux assumed full ownership of the estate. At the end of January 2021, the mayor invited the association of the Friends of Jean-Claude Brialy to "work in close collaboration " in the context of "enhancing" the star's "heritage."

Honours

Filmography

As director

Eglantine Closed Shutters A Rare Bird Loving in the Rain La nuit de l'été Les malheurs de Sophie Cinq-Mars A Good Little Devil Vacances bourgeoises Georges Dandin de Molière La dame aux camélias with Cristiana Reali and Michaël Cohen
  • ''Les parents terribles''