Jean-Pierre Aumont
Jean-Pierre Aumont | |
---|---|
in 1959. | |
Born |
Jean-Pierre Philippe Salomons 5 January 1911 Paris, France |
Died |
30 January 2001 90) Gassin, France | (aged
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1931–1996 |
Spouse(s) |
Blanche Montel (1938–1940; divorced) Maria Montez (1943–1951; her death; 1 child) Marisa Pavan (1956–2001; his death; 2 children) |
Jean-Pierre Aumont (5 January 1911 – 30 January 2001) was a French actor, and holder of the Legion d'Honneur and the Croix de Guerre for his World War II military service.
Early life
Aumont was born Jean-Pierre Philippe Salomons in Paris, the son of Suzanne (née Cahen; 1885–1940), an actress, and Alexandre Salomons, owner of La Maison du Blanc (a linen department store). His mother's uncle was well-known stage actor Georges Berr (died 1942). His father was from a Dutch Jewish family; his mother's family were French Jews. Aumont's younger brother was the noted French film director François Villiers. Aumont began studying drama at the Paris Conservatory at age 16; his mother had also studied there. His professional stage debut occurred at the age of 21. His film debut came one year later, when Jean de la Lune (Jean of the Moon) was produced in 1931.
Career
However, his most important, career-defining role came in 1934, when Jean Cocteau's play, La Machine infernale (The Infernal Machine), was staged. While his film and stage career began rising quickly, World War II broke out. Aumont remained in France until 1942, when he realized that because he was Jewish he would have to flee the Nazis. From an unoccupied portion of Vichy territory, he migrated to New York City, then to Hollywood to pursue his film career. He began working with MGM; however, after finishing the film The Cross of Lorraine, he joined the Free French Forces. He was sent to North Africa, where he participated in Operation Torch in Tunisia. He moved with the Allied armies through Italy and France. During the war, he was wounded twice. The first was on a mission with his brother; the second was more serious. Aumont's Jeep was blown up near a land-mined bridge. General Diego Brosset, commander of the 1st Free French Division, to whom Aumont was aide de camp, was killed.[1] For his bravery during the fighting, Aumont received the Legion d'Honneur and the Croix de Guerre.[2]
After the war, Aumont quickly resumed his movie career, starring opposite Ginger Rogers in Heartbeat (1946), and as the magician in the classic film Lili (1953) with Leslie Caron, among many other roles. He worked with a number of prominent directors and stars, including his (then) wife Maria Montez.
In the mid-1950s, Aumont began working in the new medium of television, appearing on several anthology programs, such as "Robert Montgomery Presents" and as a guest on the show What's My Line?. In the 1960s and 1970s, he appeared in various theater productions, including the musicals Tovarich with Vivien Leigh, Jacques Brel Is Alive and Well and Living in Paris, South Pacific, and (with his wife, Marisa Pavan), Gigi. One of his last acting performances was in A Tale of Two Cities (1989). Two years later, he was decorated with the cross of Commandeur des Arts et des Lettres,[3] and in 1991, he received an honorary César Award.[4]
Personal life
Aumont was married four times to three women. His first wife was French actress Blanche Montel, to whom he was married for two years (1938-1940), ultimately divorcing. While in Hollywood, Aumont married Maria Montez, a Dominican actress. She was known as the Queen of Technicolor, and their marriage was very happy. However, Montez drowned on 7 September 1951 after suffering an apparent heart attack in the family's villa at Suresnes. Montez and Aumont had one child, a daughter, Tina (1946–2006).
In May 1955, Aumont was romantically linked to Grace Kelly at the time of her first meeting with Prince Rainier, who would become her future husband.[5][6]
In 1956, Aumont married Italian actress Marisa Pavan. The couple starred in one film together, John Paul Jones, in which Pavan played the romantic interest of the lead, while Aumont appears as King Louis XVI. They divorced, but later remarried and remained together until his death in 2001. Aumont and Pavan had two children, Jean-Claude and Patrick.
Death
Jean-Pierre Aumont died in 2001 of a heart attack in Gassin, France, aged 90, and was cremated.
Selected filmography
Year | Title | Role | Director |
---|---|---|---|
1931 | Échec et mat | Jacque | Roger Goupillières |
1933 | Dans les rues | Jacques | Victor Trivas |
1937 | Bizarre, Bizarre | Billy | Marcel Carné |
1938 | Hôtel du Nord | Pierre | Marcel Carné |
1943 | Assignment in Brittany | Bertrand Corlay/Capt. Pierre Matard (as Pierre Aumont) | Jack Conway |
1943 | The Cross of Lorraine | Paul Dupré (as Jean Pierre Aumont) | Tay Garnett |
1946 | Heartbeat | Pierre de Roche (as Jean Pierre Aumont) | Sam Wood |
1947 | Song of Scheherazade | Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov | Walter Reisch |
1948 | Affairs of a Rogue | Prince Leopold | Alberto Cavalcanti |
1949 | Siren of Atlantis | Andre St. Avit | Gregg G. Tallas |
Golden Arrow | Andre Marchand | Gordon Parry | |
1951 | La Vendetta del corsaro | Enrico di Roccabruna | Primo Zeglio |
The Straw Lover | Stanislas Michodier | Gilles Grangier | |
1952 | Moineaux of Paris | Césarin | Maurice Cloche |
Wolves Hunt at Night | Cyril | Bernard Borderie | |
1953 | Lili | Marc (as Jean Pierre Aumont) | Charles Walters |
1954 | Charge of the Lancers | Capt. Eric Evoir | William Castle |
Royal Affairs in Versailles | Cardinal de Rohan | Sacha Guitry | |
1955 | Napoléon | Régnault de Saint-Jean d'Angély | Sacha Guitry |
1956 | Hilda Crane | Prof. Jacques De Lisle | Philip Dunne |
1957 | The Seventh Sin | Paul Duvelle | Ronald Neame |
1959 | John Paul Jones | King Louis XVI of France | John Farrow |
1961 | Le Puits aux trois vérités | a spectator at the vernissage | François Villiers |
The Blonde from Buenos Aires | the Actor | George Cahan | |
The Devil at 4 O'Clock | Jacques (as Jean Pierre Aumont) | Mervyn LeRoy | |
1962 | The Seven Deadly Sins | the husband (episode "L'Orgueuil") | Roger Vadim (episode) |
Five Miles to Midnight | Alan Stewart | Anatole Litvak | |
1969 | Castle Keep | the Count of Maldorais | Sydney Pollack |
1973 | Day for Night | Alexandre | François Truffaut |
1974 | Two Missionaries | Monsignor Delgado | Franco Rossi |
1975 | The Happy Hooker | Yves St Jacques | Nicholas Sgarro |
Cat and Mouse | Monsieur Richard | Claude Lelouch | |
Mahogany | Christian Rosetti | Berry Gordy | |
1978 | Two Solitudes | Jean-Claude Tallard | Lionel Chetwynd |
1979 | Something Short of Paradise | Jean-Fidel Milieu | David Helpern |
1982 | Nana | Count Muffat | Dan Wolman |
1984 | The Blood of Others | Monsieur Blomart | Claude Chabrol |
1986 | Sweet Country | Mr. Araya | Michael Cacoyannis |
1994 | Giorgino | Sebastien | Laurent Boutonnat |
1995 | Jefferson in Paris | D'Hancarville | James Ivory |
1996 | The Proprietor | Franz Legendre | Ismail Merchant |
References
- ↑ http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diego_Brosset
- ↑ Profile at nndb.com
- ↑ http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cat%C3%A9gorie:Commandeur_des_Arts_et_des_Lettres
- ↑ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C%C3%A9sar_Awards_1991
- ↑ H. Kristina Haugland (2006). Grace Kelly: Icon of Style to Royal Bride. Yale University Press. pp. 966–. ISBN 978-0-300-11644-1. Retrieved 5 January 2013.
- ↑ Time Inc (30 May 1955). LIFE. Time Inc. pp. 15–. ISSN 00243019. Retrieved 5 January 2013.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jean-Pierre Aumont. |
- Jean-Pierre Aumont at the Internet Movie Database
- Jean-Pierre Aumont at the Internet Broadway Database
- Jean-Pierre Aumont at Find a Grave
- Jean-Pierre Aumont infosite
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