Michel Simon
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François Michel Simon, more commonly known as Michel Simon (b. 9 April 1895, Geneva, Switzerland - d. 30 May 1975, Bry-sur-Marne, France), was a French actor.
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[edit] Biography
Simon used to say about himself that he was born in 1895 and, "as misfortune never comes singly, cinema was born the same year".
Son of a sausage-maker and Protestant, Simon soon left his family and town to go to Paris, where he first lived at the Hotel Renaissance, Saint-Martin Street, then in Montmartre. He worked many different jobs to survive, such as giving boxing lessons or peddling smuggled lighters. He devoured every book he could find, with special preference for Georges Courteline's writings.
His artistic beginnings in 1912 were modest: magician, clown and acrobat stooge in a dancers' show called "Ribert's and Simon's", in the Montreuil-sous-Bois Casino.
Conscripted into the Swiss Army in 1914, he was an undisciplined soldier, spending most of his time in prison and falling ill with tuberculosis.
In 1915, during a leave, he saw Georges Pitoëff's early work in the French language, at the Theatre de la Comédie of Geneva, acting in Hedda Gabler.
He then decided to become an actor too, but he would have to wait until 1920 to make a brief appearance in Pitoëff's company, saying three lines for the registrar role in the Shakespeare's Measure for Measure. He also worked at this time as the company's photographer. He was spotted for the first time in a supporting role in George Bernard Shaw's Androcles and the Lion. In 1922, his company moved to Paris at the Comédie des Champs-Elysées.
He quit the following year to become a light comedy actor in plays by Tristan Bernard, Marcel Achard and Yves Mirande. Marcel Achard presented him to Charles Dullin, in whose company he acted in Je ne vous aime pas with Valentine Tessier.
[edit] Inimitable talent
Louis Jouvet, who has meanwhile replaced Pitoëff, hired him at the Comédie des Champs Elysées. Simon then gave a brilliant performance in Jean de la Lune, a play by Marcel Achard. His inimitable talent transformed his Cloclo supporting role to the big attraction of the play.
His theatrical career then began to meet a huge success for a large repertoire: Shakespeare, Bernard Shaw, Pirandello, Oscar Wilde, Bourdet, Bernstein, but cinema brought him the biggest popularity.
He made his first appearance in the film Feu Mathias Pascal, adapted from Pirandello, with Marcel L'Herbier as director. Nearly at the same time, he appeared in La vocation d'André Carel, directed by Jean Choux. The film used small-scale production methods, just as Nouvelle Vague would do in 1958.
In silent movies, he brought his amazing appearance and his unusual face - a talent with an exceptional mobility but truly without mannerism. He easily played with his body using an unlimited virtuosity, especially his ugliness, evolving from smartness to sympathy, goodness to naivety, ludicrousness to frightening, stupidity to comical, mischievousness to cruelty.
His film career was really boosted with the advent of talking pictures. People remarked that his elocution and voice tone were as original as his appearance and play. He then revealed his unclassifiable talent: action comedy, drama, tragedy, light comedy.
He appeared in 55 plays from 1920 to 1965, and 101 from 1965 to 1975. He did unforgettable work for Jean Renoir (La Chienne, Boudu Saved From Drowning), Jean Vigo (L'Atalante) and Marcel Carné (Port of the Shadows, Bizarre, Bizarre).
[edit] Living with animals than humans
Since the 1950s, he reined in his activities, due to an accident involving a makeup dye that paralysed part of his body and face.
He lived for a long time in Noisy-le-Grand, near Paris, in a kind of bohemian house, filled with amazing bric-a-brac and surrounded by rank weeds. He usued to say that he preferred "living with animals than humans".
A lesser-known aspect is that he was fond of pornography: he amassed a large collection of pornographic items, including pictures and films, which was unfortunately broken up when he died in 1975, aged 80, from a pulmonary embolism, at Saint-Camille Hospital, Bry-sur-Marne.
He was buried in the Grand-Lancy Cemetery of Geneva, in the grave of his parents, following his last will and testament.
[edit] Anecdotes
In the 1920s/1930s Simon enjoyed associating with people of the lower classes in Paris and for a while, at a time when prostitution was legal, he lived in a brothel.[citation needed]
[edit] Selective Filmography
- 1931 : On purge bébé by Jean Renoir
- 1931 : La Chienne by Jean Renoir ... Maurice Legrand
- 1932 : Boudu Saved from Drowning by Jean Renoir ... Priape Boudu
- 1934 : L'Atalante by Jean Vigo ... Old Jules
- 1937 : Bizarre, Bizarre by Marcel Carné ... Irwin Molyneux
- 1938 : Boys' School by Christian-Jaque ... Lemel, the drawing teacher
- 1939 : Port of Shadows by Marcel Carné ... Zabel
- 1939 : Fric-Frac by Claude Autant-Lara & Maurice Lehmann ... Jo
- 1941 : The Story of Tosca by Carl Koch ... Scarpia
- 1940 : La Comédie du bonheur by Marcel L'Herbier ... M. Jourdain
- 1946 : Panic by Julien Duvivier ... Monsieur Hire
- 1951 : Poison by Sacha Guitry ... Paul-Louis Victor Braconnier
- 1955 : The Impossible Mr. Pipelet by André Hunebelle ... Maurice Martin
- 1960 : Pete the Tender by François Villiers ... Pierrot
- 1962 : Le Diable et les Dix Commandements by Julien Duvivier
- 1964 : The Train by John Frankenheimer
- 1966 : The Two of Us by Claude Berri ... Pepe
- 1971 : Blanche by Walerian Borowczyk
- 1972 : The Most Wonderful Evening of My Life by Ettore Scola ... Attorney Zorn
- 1975 : 'The Red Ibis by Jean-Pierre Mocky ... Zizi