Cinema as a Way of Life: Notes from a conversation with Jeanne Moreau

La Notte

Picture: Cinetext Bildarchiv

La Notte

On the occasion of her 80th birthday, we revisit a 2006 interview by Peter Cowie with one of Europe's most iconic actresses, Jeanne Moreau.

Jeanne Moreau is the European actress par excellence. The length and abiding vigor of her career, allied to her creative alliances with such brilliant directors as Antonioni, Losey, Malle, Truffaut, and Welles, has given her a pre-eminence that none of her contemporaries can match. Turning eighty in 2008, she exults in her profession. (Her awards include Best Actress at the Cannes Film Festival 1960, the Lion d'Or at the Venice Film Festival 1992, Fellowship of BAFTA in London 1996, European Film Academy Lifetime Achievement Award in 1997, Special Tribute at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in Los Angeles 1998, and the Festival Trophy at Cannes in 2003.)

'It's a calling,' she emphasizes. 'I never leave the set. Being a director as well as an actor, I'm interested in everything that's going on. When I read a new script, not only am I concerned with what I have to do, but with all the other performers.'

You are half-French, half-English. Do you find that this blend of cultures has helped you in your career — perhaps to think of Europe in a wider context?

Jeanne Moreau: I think so, in many ways. I find in myself a touch of Irish blood. I can be very shy, very introverted, but when I start speaking in public, I love it.

I didn't look forward to the life of an average woman: marriage, raising a family and so forth... I loved studying. I had to pass an exam each year, I never failed. So now, when I receive an award or a tribute in a festival, there's a little girl inside me that says 'You see, I was good!' Then I think of my father's antagonism; he despised actresses and women artists.

My mother was born in Oldham, Lancashire. My grandfather and grandmother moved to the south, and when I spent time with them in the summer, we used to live on the yacht my grandfather had bought to teach sailing. We were in small harbors on the south coast — Hove, Southwick and Littlehampton. My sister lives in Brighton now, and I still have family on the Isle of Man. My grandma was born in Ireland, in the same county where Nora, James Joyce's wife, was born and raised.

I started films and theatre at the same time. I made a lot of films before I worked with Louis Malle, and then became famous in internationally successful movies. Before – in the 1950s – physically I didn't meet the usual standards of beauty, it was the period of Martine Carol, Françoise Arnoul, Dany Robin - blonde girls, big eyes and 'tits'.

While still young, she became a highly regarded stage actress at the Comédie Française and the Théâtre National Populaire, but found herself confined to supporting roles in gangster films like Touchez pas au grisbi, with Jean Gabin.

Her talent attracted attention, nonetheless. In 1953, Michelangelo Antonioni wanted to sign her for I Vinti, but the Comédie Française refused to release her. Also in the early 1950s Orson Welles wanted her to act in his stage production, The Unthinking Lobster, at the Théâtre Edouard VII in Paris. But once again, her contract held her fast.

One evening Maurice Bessy, a French journalist, came to my dressing room and said that Orson was in town and wanted to meet me. I was then playing Bianca in Othello. Orson sat opposite me at the table, and years later he reminded me that when he'd dropped me in the street outside my apartment, I had been too shy to say anything and that he was 'dying' to kiss me.

Moreau would go on to take parts in four of Orson Welles's films: The Trial, Chimes at Midnight (Falstaff), The Immortal Story, and The Deep, which was shot in Yugoslavia and remains unreleased to this day.

I persuaded him to meet Romy Schneider, whom he took for The Trial. During that time, Orson was staying at the Hotel Meurice in Paris, and from his balcony he could see the two huge clocks of the Gare d'Orsay across the Seine. We used to peer through the barred gates of the old, abandoned railway station at night, and he finally chose it as the location for The Trial.

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