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Radio France Internationale
Radio France Internationale
Lifestyle

French art-house actor Michel Piccoli dies aged 94

Michel Piccoli (centre) with Italian film director Nanni at the screening of Habemus Papam at the 64th Cannes film festival, 13 May 2011. © Tony Barson

From Luis Bunuel's Belle de Jour and The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie, to a playing opposite Brigitte Bardot in Jean-Luc Godard's Contempt (Le Mépris) in 1963, Piccoli had a knack for becoming one with his roles.

Jean-Luc Godard (centre), Brigitte Bardot (left) and Michel Piccoli in Godard's 1963 film Le Mépris which is among the pictures in the J-L Godard Retrospective at the 2017 Lumière Film Festival in Lyon, France, October 2017
Jean-Luc Godard (centre), Brigitte Bardot (left) and Michel Piccoli in Godard's 1963 film Le Mépris which is among the pictures in the J-L Godard Retrospective at the 2017 Lumière Film Festival in Lyon, France, October 2017 © Rome Paris Film - Films Concordia / DR

"I do not put on an act... I slip away behind my characters. To be an actor you have to be flexible," Piccoli once said.

Tributes have been pouring in to a man who was able to combine humour, and edginess, a style which suited art-house and mainstream viewers alike.

He was sometimes likened to a French Cary Grant, Jimmy Stewart or Gary Cooper, actors who were handsome all-rounders.

Beginning his career in the 1940s, Piccoli went on to make over 170 movies, working into his late eighties.

He worked alongside some of the big names of cinema such as Jean Renoir, Jean-Pierre Melville, and Britain’s Alfred Hitchcock, and appeared in such films as Michel Deville's Death in a French Garden (1985), and Leos Carax’s Mauvais Sang (1986).

Best actor at Cannes

One of the actor’s last major roles was in 2011's Nanni Moretti’s Habemus Papam, which premiered in competition at the Cannes Film Festival.

Yet despite his full career, Piccoli never won a Cesar, the French equivalent of an Oscar, despite being nominated four times including for Louis Malle's Milou in May and Jacques Rivette's The Beautiful Troublemaker in 1991.

He did, however, win best actor at the Cannes film festival in 1980 for playing a tortured Italian judge in Marco Bellocchio's A Leap in the Dark and the following year shared best actor at Berlin for A Strange Affair.

One of his best known films outside France was Marco Ferreri's 1973 La Grande Bouffe (Blow-Out), in which a group of male friends shut themselves up in a house with prostitutes and try to eat themselves to death.

Outside of cinema, he was known for his left wing views and counted philosophers Simone de Beauvoir and John-Paul Sartre among his friends.

Piccoli was married three times: first to Eléonore Hirt, then to singer Juliette Gréco (until 1977), and to Ludivine Clerc, who survives him. He has three children; Inord and Missia and a daughter from his first marriage, Anne-Cordélia.

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