Gérard
Depardieu was born in 1948 in the provincial French town of
Chateauroux, the son of a metal-sheet worker. He had a
pretty troubled youth, leaving school at 12 and running away from
home. His luck changed in the mid 1960s when a friend found him a
place at the Theatre Nationale Populaire
in Paris, where his acting career began. Although now better
known
for his film acting, he has also worked in theatre, often to great
acclaim.
After appearing
in a
number of films in small roles, his big break came in 1973 when Bernard
Blier
offered him a lead role in Les Valseuses, a part which fitted
the
actor’s personality and enabled him to draw on his delinquent
past.
Stardom then
followed as sure as day follows night. After playing similar
roles (the drop out, the dangerous outsider) in a dozen films in the
late 1970s, he won
critical claim for his part in François Truffaut’s Le
Dernier métro, for which he was awarded a
César. He then starred in a series of lavish historical
dramas in the 1980s which were phenomenally successful on both sides of
the Atlantic. These include: Daniel Vigne’s Le Retour
de Martin Guerre, Andrzej Wajda’s Danton and Claude Berri’s
Jean de Florette. He topped all this with his
definitive performance of Cyrano de Bergerac in Jean-Paul
Rappeneau’s 1990 film of that name, for which he won the Best Actor
award at Cannes and even an Oscar nomination.
In 1990,
Depardieu cemented
his growing popularity in the United States by making his first
American
film there, Green Card, which was instantly successful.
Since,
he has been flitting between France and Hollywood, taking on a
combination of small character parts and major roles, bolstering his
reputation as an international star – a pretty rare phenomenon for a
French actor.
More recently,
the actor
founded his own film production company and sometimes directs his own
films.
In a joint venture with a French production company he produced a
television
mini-series version of The Count of Monte Cristo in which he
starred. The series was popular both in France and in the United
States,
prompting further series of this ilk to be commissioned, including Les
Misérables and Napoléon.
Although his main
passion in life at the moment appears to be his vineyard in the south
of France,
Depardieu still finds time to act, appearing in such films as the
popular Astérix and Obelix. His son, Guillaume, is
also
enjoying growing success as a film actor.
Gérard
Depardieu's contribution to French cinema has been immense, appearing
in well over 100 films. In a recent poll in France, he was voted
the best French actor, and his popularity across the world shows no
sign of diminishing.
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