Mary Marquet
Mary Marquet | |
---|---|
Mary Marquet and Victor Francen on their wedding day in 1934. | |
Born |
Micheline Marguerite Delphine Marquet 14 April 1895 Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire |
Died |
29 August 1979 84) 18th arrondissement of Paris, France | (aged
Mary Marquet (14 April 1895 – 29 August 1979), born Micheline Marguerite Delphine Marquet, was a French stage and film actress.[1]
Career
Marquet came from a family of artists: her parents were actors, an aunt was a star dancer at the Paris Opera, and another was an official at the Comédie-Française. She entered the National Superior Conservatory of Dramatic Art in 1913 and studied under Paul Mounet. She failed her final exams, but was immediately engaged in the company of Sarah Bernhardt, who was a great friend of the family. She went on play alongside her in The Eugene Morand cathedral.
She became established with her role in L'Aiglon by Edmond Rostand, whose mistress she became from 1915 to his death in 1918. She made her film debut in 1914 in a silent film, Les Frères ennemis, which was never finished. Her first major film role was in Sappho, produced by Léonce Perret in 1932. After World War I, she joined the Comédie-Française in 1923 where she stayed for over twenty years, before moving to the fr:théâtre de boulevard.
During the World War II, throughout the occupation, she sought the protection of German officers to protect her son who had told her of his intention to join the Resistance. The response was his arrest and deportation to Buchenwald concentration camp where he died aged 21. This was possibly the cause of her problems at the time of the Liberation when, due to her alleged relations with the enemy, Marquet was arrested and sent to Drancy and then to Fresnes. She was later released for lack of evidence.
In the 1950s, she turned to poetry recital, while continuing her career in theater on the boulevards. She worked for ORTF in the Maigret episodes of Les Cinq Dernières Minutes and Les Saintes Chéries and in the television adaptation of Lucien Leuwen, the novel by Stendhal.
Parallel to her acting career, as an antiquarian she ran a stand for many years at the Swiss Village, an important antique market in Paris where she demonstrated her skills as a saleswoman, mixing theatrical memorabilia with commercial interests.
Among her most successful parts in over forty films, were her roles in, Landru in 1962, Claude Chabrol, La Grande Vadrouille in 1966 by Gérard Oury, and Casanova in 1975 by Federico Fellini. After these three minor parts she played important roles in La vie de château (1966) the mother of Philippe Noiret and the stepmother of Catherine Deneuve and the Le malin plaisir (1975) with Claude Jade and Anny Duperey.
Personal life
Her first lover was Edmond Rostand around 1915, living together for three years. In 1920 she married Maurice Escande, the future director of the house of Molière, ending in divorce in 1921, before meeting Firmin Gémier, the director of the new Théâtre National Populaire, who was still married but whose wife was barren. In 1922, Marquet gave birth to their son.
Before the death of Gémier in 1933, Marquet became the mistress of the president of the then Council, André Tardieu, in a semi-official liaison. Having broken up with Tardieu, she married Victor Francen. The couple separated after seven years together. Marquet died of heart attack at the age of 84 in her apartment in the Rue Carpeaux, She is buried in the Montmartre cemetery,
Filmography
Cinema
- 1913: Frères ennemis by Henri Pouctal
- 1913: De medeminaars by Alfred Machin – (unsure)
- 1915: Sacrifice fraternel by René Leprince
- 1917: La P'tite du sixième by René Hervil et Louis Mercanton
- 1921: La Ferme du Choquart by Jean Kemm
- 1924: La Voyante (film) by Leon Abrams
- 1934: Sapho (film, 1934) by Léonce Perret
- 1934: Un soir à la Comédie-Française by Léonce Perret – court métrage –
- 1949: Interdit au public (film) by Alfred Pasquali
- 1949: Le 84 prend des vacances by Léo Joannon
- 1951: Drôle de noce by Léo Joannon
- 1951: Foyer perdu by Jean Loubignac
- 1951: Un jour avec vous by Jean-René Legrand
- 1952: Minuit quai de Bercy by Christian Stengel
- 1952: Lettre ouverte / jaloux comme un tigre by Alex Joffé
- 1952: Piédalu fait des miracles by Jean Loubignac
- 1954: Royal Affairs in Versailles by Sacha Guitry: Madame de Maintenon
- 1955: Men in White by Ralph Habib
- 1955: Maid in Paris by Pierre Gaspard-Huit
- 1955: Le Secret de sœur Angèle by Léo Joannon
- 1956: Law of the Streets by Ralph Habib
- 1956: Quelle sacrée soirée / Nuit blanche et rouge à lèvres by Robert Vernay
- 1959 : Drôle de phénomènes by Robert Vernay
- 1960: The Nabob Affair by Ralph Habib
- 1962: Arsène Lupin contre Arsène Lupin (film, 1962) by Édouard Molinaro
- 1963: Landru by Claude Chabrol
- 1963: Nous irons à Deauville by Francis Rigaud
- 1965: Les Combinards by Jean-Claude Roy
- 1966: The Gardener of Argenteuil by Jean-Paul Le Chanois
- 1966: A Matter of Resistance by Jean-Paul Rappeneau
- 1966: La Grande Vadrouille by Gérard Oury: mother superior
- 1967: Des garçons et des filles by Étienne Périer
- 1967: Ce sacré grand-père by Jacques Poitrenaud
- 1968: Phèdre (film, 1968) by Pierre Jourdan
- 1968: Bruno, l'enfant du dimanche by Louis Grospierre
- 1968: Les Cinq Dernières Minutes (Traitement de choc) by Claude Loursais
- 1973: Par ici la monnaie by Richard Balducci
- 1974: Le Mouton enragé by Michel Deville
- 1974: La Merveilleuse Visite by Marcel Carné
- 1974: La Bonne Nouvelle by André Weinfeld
- 1975: Malicious Pleasure by Bernard Toublanc-Michel
- 1976: Fellini's Casanova by Federico Fellini
- 1976: Opération Lady Marlène by Robert Lamoureux
- 1976: Une fille cousue de fil blanc by Michel Lang
Television
- 1968: Les Saintes Chéries, episode Ève et les grands-parents (Daniel Gélin's mother and Henri Crémieux's wife)
- 1969: Les Cinq Dernières Minutes by Claude Loursais, episode Les Cinq Dernières Minutes
- 1972: Les Enquêtes du commissaire Maigret by François Villiers, episode: Maigret se fâche
- 1973: Lucien Leuwen (mini-serie), TV film by Claude Autant-Lara
- 1974: Paul et Virginie (série télévisée) by Pierre Gaspard-Huit
Theatre
Before time at the Comédie-Française
- 1912: Faust by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, théâtre de l'Odéon
- 1920]: L'Homme à la rose by Henry Bataille, mise-en-scène André Brulé, théâtre de Paris
- 1921: Le Caducée by André Pascal, Théâtre de la Renaissance, théâtre du Gymnase
- 1921: La Bataille by Pierre Frondaie d'après Claude Farrère, mise-en-scène Firmin Gémier, théâtre Antoine
- 1922: L'Insoumise by Pierre Frondaie, théâtre Antoine
During time at the Comédie-Française
- Admission at the Comédie-Française in 1923
- Sociétaire from 1928 to 1945
- 376th sociétaire
- 1923: Oreste by René Berton from Iphigenia in Tauris by Euripides, Comédie-Française
- 1923: Jean de La Fontaine ou Le Distrait volontaire by Louis Geandreau et Léon Guillot de Saix, Comédie-Française
- 1924: Les Trois Sultanes by Charles-Simon Favart, Comédie-Française
- 1924: La Victoire de Ronsard by René Berton, Comédie-Française
- 1924: L'Adieu by Louis Vaunois, Comédie-Française
- 1924: La Reprise by Maurice Donnay, Comédie-Française
- 1925: Esther by Racine, Comédie-Française
- 1927: La Torche sous le boisseau by Gabriele D'Annunzio, Comédie-Française
- 1928: Les Noces d'argent by Paul Géraldy, Comédie-Française
- 1930: Le Carrosse du Saint-Sacrement by Prosper Mérimée, mise-en-scène Émile Fabre, Comédie-Française
- 1932: Christine by Paul Géraldy, Comédie-Française
- 1934: Andromaque by Racine, mise-en-scène Raphaël Duflos, Comédie-Française – Andromaque
- 1935: Madame Quinze de Jean Sarment, mise-en-scène de l'auteur, Comédie-Française
- 1935: Lucrèce Borgia by Victor Hugo, mise-en-scène Émile Fabre, Comédie-Française – Lucrèce Borgia
- 1936: Hedda Gabler by Henrik Ibsen, mise-en-scène Lugné-Poe, Comédie-Française – Hedda Gabler
- 1936: La Rabouilleuse by Émile Fabre after Honoré de Balzac, mise-en-scène Émile Fabre, Comédie-Française – Flore Brazier
- 1938: Hedda Gabler by Henrik Ibsen, mise-en-scène Lugné-Poe, Comédie-Française – Hedda Gabler
- 1938: Tricolore by Pierre Lestringuez, mise-en-scène Louis Jouvet, Comédie-Française
- 1939: Athalie by Jean Racine, Comédie-Française – Athalie
- 1941: Lucrezia Borgia by Victor Hugo, mise-en-scène Émile Fabre, Comédie-Française – Lucrèce Borgia
- 1942: Iphigénie en Tauride by Goethe, mise-en-scène Jean Yonnel, Comédie-Française – Iphigénie
- 1942: Phèdre by Racine, mise-en-scène Jean-Louis Barrault, Comédie-Française
- 1943: Renaud et Armide by Jean Cocteau, mise-en-scène by the author, Comédie-Française
- 1943: Iphigénie à Delphes by Gerhart Hauptmann, mise-en-scène Pierre Bertin, Comédie-Française – Iphigénie
- 1943: The Satin Slipper by Paul Claudel, mise-en-scène Jean-Louis Barrault, Comédie-Française
- 1944: Horace by Corneille, mise-en-scène Mary Marquet, Comédie-Française
After time at the Comédie-Française
- 1945: Les Dames de Niskala by Hella Wuolijoki, Théâtre Édouard VII
- 1948: Interdit au public by Roger Dornès and Jean Marsan, mise en scène Alfred Pasquali, Comédie-Wagram
- 1950: La Grande Pauline et les Petits Chinois by René Aubert, mise-en-scène Pierre Valde, Théâtre de l'Étoile
- 1951: Mort d'un rat by Jan de Hartog, mise en scène Jean Mercure, Théâtre Gramont
- 1951: Les Vignes du seigneur by Robert de Flers and Francis de Croisset, mise-en-scène Pierre Dux, Théâtre de Paris
- 1953: Le Ravageur by Gabriel Chevallier, mise-en-scène Alfred Pasquali, Théâtre des Bouffes-Parisiens
- 1955: Les Trois messieurs de Bois-Guillaume by Louis Verneuil, mise-en-scène Christian-Gérard, avec Fernand Gravey, Théâtre des Variétés
- 1957: The Castle by Franz Kafka, mise-en-scène Jean-Louis Barrault Théâtre Sarah Bernhardt
- 1963: Pour Lucrèce de Jean Giraudoux, mise en scène Raymond Gérôme, Festival de Bellac
- 1963: Sémiramis by Marc Camoletti, mise-en-scène Michel de Ré, Théâtre Édouard VII
- 1966: Se trouver de Luigi Pirandello, mise-en-scène Claude Régy, Théâtre Antoine
- 1969: Le Bon Saint-Éloi de Pierrette Bruno, mise en scène Jacques Mauclair, La Pépinière-Théâtre
- 1971: La Maison de Zaza de Gaby Bruyère, mise-en-scène Robert Manuel, with Alfred Pasquali, Théâtre des Nouveautés
Publications
- Vous qui m'aimiez, vous que j'aimais
- Ce que j'ose dire
- Ce que je n'ai pas dit
- Tout n'est peut-être pas dit
References
- ↑ Delacroix, Christiane. "Décès de Mary Marquet". Institut national de l'audiovisuel (in French). Retrieved 3 April 2016.
Further reading
- Foucart, Yvan (2007). Dictionnaire des comédiens français disparus (in French). Mormoiron: Éditions cinéma. ISBN 978-2-9531-1390-7.
External links
- Mary Marquet on IMDb