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Yves Robert

Yves Robert (19 June 1920 – 10 May 2002)[1] was a French actor, screenwriter, director, and producer.

This article is about the French actor. For the French trombone player, see Yves Robert (musician).

Yves Robert

(1920-06-19)19 June 1920

Saumur, Maine-et-Loire, France

10 May 2002(2002-05-10) (aged 81)

Paris, France

Actor, director, producer, screenwriter

1948–2001

Danièle Delorme (m. 1956–2002)

Xavier Gélin
(stepson, deceased)

Life and career[edit]

Robert was born in Saumur, Maine-et-Loire, France. In his teens, he went to Paris to pursue a career in acting, starting with unpaid parts on stage in the city's various theatre workshops. From ages 12–20 he set type as a typographer, then studied mime in his early 20s.[1] In 1948 he made his motion picture debut with one of the secondary roles in the film, Les Dieux du dimanche. Within a few years, Robert was writing scripts, directing, and producing.


Yves Robert's directorial efforts included several successful comedies[2] for which he had written the screenplay. His 1962 film, La Guerre des boutons won France's Prix Jean Vigo. His 1972 film Le grand blond avec une chaussure noire won the Silver Bear at the 23rd Berlin International Film Festival in 1973.[3] In 1976, Un éléphant ça trompe énormément, starring his wife, earned him international acclaim. Robert's 1973 devastating comedy Salut l'artiste is considered by many performers to be the ultimate film about the humiliations of the actor's life. In 1977, he directed another comedy, Nous irons tous au paradis, which was nominated for a César Award for Best Film.


In 1990, Robert directed two dramatic films, My Mother's Castle (Le château de ma mère) and My Father's Glory (La Gloire de mon Père). Based on autobiographical novels by Marcel Pagnol, they were jointly voted "Best Film" at the 1991 Seattle International Film Festival,[4] and received rave reviews.[5][6] Over his career, he directed more than twenty feature-length motion pictures,[7] wrote an equal number of scripts, and acted in more than seventy-five films. Although his last major role was perhaps in 1980, A Bad Son by Claude Sautet, as the working-class father of a drug-dealer,[1] he continued acting past 1997.


Robert played opposite Danièle Delorme in the 1951 play Colombe (Dove) by Jean Anouilh. They married in 1956, and jointly formed the film production company La Guéville in 1961.[8] La Guéville also released several films by Monty Python and Terry Gilliam, which was very influential into establishing the comedy troupe to French audiences. He died in Paris on 10 May 2002[7] from a cerebral hemorrhage. He was buried in Montparnasse Cemetery with the epitaph "A man of joy ...", where visitors leave buttons of many colors.He was survived by Danièle and two children, Anne and Jean-Denis Robert,[7] by first wife, actress Rosy Varte. That month's Cannes Film Festival paid homage to his contribution to French film.

(1954)

Les hommes ne pensent qu'à ça

(1958)

Neither Seen Nor Recognized

(Signed, Arsene Lupin) (1959)

Signé Arsène Lupin

(1960)

The Fenouillard Family

(War of the Buttons) (1962)

La Guerre des boutons

(1964)[1]

Bebert and the Train

(1965) – 4 songs on 45 RPM vinyl[9]

Les Copains

Monnaie de singe (Monkey Money) (1966)

(Very Happy Alexander) (1968)

Alexandre le bienheureux

(1969)

Clérambard

(The Tall Blonde Man with One Black Shoe) (1972)

Le grand blond avec une chaussure noire

(Hail the Artist) (1973)

Salut l'artiste

(The Return of the Tall Blond Man with One Black Shoe) (1974)

Le Retour du Grand Blond

(Pardon Mon Affaire) (1976)

Un éléphant ça trompe énormément

(Pardon Mon Affaire, Too!) (1977)

Nous irons tous au paradis

(1979)[1]

Courage - Let's Run

(The Twin) (1984)

Le Jumeau

(My Father's Glory) (1990)

La Gloire de mon Père

(My Mother's Castle) (1990)

Le château de ma mère

(1992)

Le Bal des casse-pieds

Montparnasse-Pondichéry (1994)

Director


Actor


Producer

Reissues and remakes[edit]

His black and white adaptation of the book La Guerre des Boutons having sold nearly 10 million tickets at the French box office in 1962, was hugely popular, and planned for a nationwide reissue 12 October 2011.[10]


Some films were also re-made in Hollywood.[7] The Tall Blond Man with One Black Shoe (1972), a spy spoof featuring the physical comedic skills of Pierre Richard, became The Man with One Red Shoe (1985) with Tom Hanks. Pardon Mon Affaire (1976), a sexy farce with Jean Rochefort, became The Woman in Red (1984).[1]

La Gloire de Mon Pere + Le Chateau de Ma Mere (Restored) 1990–1991 2002, 2005[12] & 2012[13] Blu-ray[14]

[11]

The Tall Blond Man with One Black Shoe + The Return of the Tall Blond Man 1972, 1974

[15]

Ni vu..., ni connu... (1958) 2009

[12]

at IMDb

Yves Robert

from La Gloire de mon Père (My Father's Glory) 1990

Clips

in French Wiki

Yves Robert

Media related to Yves Robert at Wikimedia Commons

Yves Robert. Un homme de joie. Dialogue avec Jérôme Tonnerre, Paris, Flammarion, 1996, 394 p. ( 2-08-067240-1)

ISBN