Born Claude Marcelle Jorré, in Dijon,
France, the daughter of English professors, Claude Jade spent three years at the Dijon
Conservatory of Dramatic Art. Subsequently she moved to Paris and began acting in
television productions and on stage.
It was while she was performing at the Theatre
Moderne, that she was discovered by François Truffaut, who cast her in the
role of Christine Darbon, the girl-friend of his alter-ego Antoine Doinel (Jean-Pierre
Léaud), in his film Baisers
volés (Stolen Kisses). Her screen debut earned her great
acclaim and placed Claude Jade in the international spotlight. She reprised her
role as Christine in Truffaut's Domicile
conjugal (Bed and Board) and L'Amour
en fuite (Love on the Run).
Claude Jade gained fame and adulation, caught
the attention of Alfred Hitchcock, who cast her in Topaz, and went on to enjoy
a prolific international career in USA, Italy, Belgium, Japan, Germany and USSR as well
as French productions.
In French Cinema her most memorable roles where
Manette in Edouard Molinaro's Mon oncle Benjamin, the unscrupulous Eleanore in
Gérard Brach's Le bateau sur l'herbe and Robert Hossein's love Françoise
in Denys de la Patellières Prêtres interdits.
Claude Jade also continued to perform on stage
and television, where she had her most popular role as Véronique d'Hergemont, heroine
of mini-series L'île aux trente cercueils (1979), and from 1998 until 2000
as Anna in the television series Cap des Pins.
Her many contributions to French Culture were
recognised in 1998, when she was named a Chevalier de la legion d'honneur. In 2000
she received the New Wave Award at Palm Beach International Film Festival for the
‘trend-setting role in the world cinema’.
Claude Jade died, aged 58, on 1st December 2006 in France, from complications arising
from an eye cancer.
Biography by G.S.
For further information about Claude Jade,
visit:
http://www.chez.com/alaincine10/Jade/Jade.htm
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