Famous French actor dies
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Veteran actor and one of the most prominent figures of the new wave of French cinema, Jean-Louis Trentinian, has died at the age of 91.
Charso Press: Jean-Louis Trentinian has starred in the directorial works of Krzysztof Kieslowski, Bernardo Bertolucci, Claude Lellouche, Claude Chabrol, François Truffaut and Michael Hanke, according to an official announcement. His family died at the age of 91.
Born in 1930, he spent his childhood under the influence of World War II, but became interested in racing cars through his two uncles, one of whom was killed in a car race in 1933. She made a name for herself in acting by starring in Roger Vadimo’s “Brigitte Bardot” and “And God Created Woman” by Roger Vadim in 1956, but then served as a conscript during the War of Independence. Sent to Algeria.
Returning to France, Trentinian experienced his love of racing in the lead role of Claude Lellouche’s 1966 film A Man and a Woman. The film was a huge success for French cinema in the United States, and Trentinian, along with another French actress, Anouk Ame, starred in the next two episodes of A Man and a Woman: 20 Years Later (1986) and The Best Years. Life “(2019) also played.
The French actor also collaborated with a number of other important directors of the period, including Claude Chabrol in the drama “Female Deer” (1986), “Costa-Gauras” in the Oscar-winning film “Zed” (1969), ” Bernardo Bertolucci in the anti-fascist drama The Sequel (1970) and Eric Romer in The Night with the Fashion Lady (1969).
The prominent actor limited his activities almost exclusively to European cinema, but he played a spy in the 1983 film “Under Fire”. He also starred in the final films of two great European authors and directors, including “Finally Sunday” by François Truffaut and “Red” by Kristof Kieslowski.
She starred in a few films in the 1990s and 2000s, starring in Michael Hanke’s 2012 Palme d’Or “Love” starring opposite Emmanuel Riva as an elderly married couple. Which won the Trentinian Award for Best Actor at the César Awards and also appeared in Hanke’s next film in 2017, “Happy Ending”.
He won the Silver Bear Award for Best Actor at the Berlin Film Festival in 1968 for his role in The Man Who Lies, and his role in the French film Zed also won him the Best Actor Award at the 1969 Cannes Film Festival.