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Patrice Chéreau

Patrice Chéreau (French: [pa.tʁis ʃe.ʁo]; 2 November 1944 – 7 October 2013) was a French opera and theatre director, filmmaker, actor and producer. In France he is best known for his work for the theatre, internationally for his films La Reine Margot and Intimacy, and for his staging of the Jahrhundertring, the centenary Ring Cycle at the Bayreuth Festival in 1976. Winner of almost twenty movie awards, including the Cannes Jury Prize and the Golden Berlin Bear, Chéreau served as president of the jury at the 2003 Cannes festival.

Patrice Chéreau
Chéreau in 2009
Born(1944-11-02)2 November 1944
Lézigné, Maine-et-Loire, France
Died7 October 2013(2013-10-07) (aged 68)
Paris, France
Occupations
  • Theatre director
  • opera director
  • film director
  • actor
  • screenwriter
  • television producer
Years active1966–2013
Awards

From 1966, he was artistic director of the Public-Theatre in the Parisian suburb of Sartrouville, where in his team were stage designer Richard Peduzzi, costume designer Jacques Schmidt and lighting designer André Diot, with whom he collaborated in many later productions. From 1982, he was director of "his own stage" at the Théâtre Nanterre-Amandiers at Nanterre where he staged plays by Jean Racine, Marivaux and Shakespeare as well as works by Jean Genet, Heiner Müller and Bernard-Marie Koltès.

He accepted selected opera productions, such as: the first performance of the three-act version of Alban Berg's Lulu, completed by Friedrich Cerha, at the Paris Opera in 1979; Berg's Wozzeck at the Staatsoper Berlin in 1994; Wagner's Tristan und Isolde at La Scala in 2007; Janáček's From the House of the Dead, shown at several festivals and the Metropolitan Opera; and, as his last staging, Elektra by Richard Strauss, first performed at the Aix-en-Provence Festival in July 2013. He was awarded the Europe Theatre Prize in 2008.

Life and career

Early life

Chéreau was born in Lézigné, Maine-et-Loire. His father, Jean-Baptiste Chéreau, was a painter, and his mother, Marguerite Pelicier, was a graphic designer. He attended school in Paris. Early on he was taken to the Louvre and became interested in the arts, cinema, theatre and music. At age 12, he designed stage sets for plays.[1] He became well known to Parisian critics as director, actor, and stage manager of his high-school theatre (lycée Louis-le-Grand). At 15, he was enthusiastically celebrated as a theatre prodigy. In 1964, at the age of 19, he began directing for the professional theatre.[2] While studying at the Sorbonne, he professionally staged Victor Hugo's L'Intervention, and subsequently dropped out of the university.[3]

1966: Sartrouville

 
Jacques Schmidt, costume designer

In 1966, Chéreau was appointed artistic director of the Public-Theatre in the Parisian suburb of Sartrouville.[4][5] With "idealism and inventiveness", he made the theatre a "municipal commodity", presenting not only theatre but also "cinema, concerts, poetry productions, lectures and debates about everything from politics to pot".[1] His theatrical team included costume designer Jacques Schmidt, stage designer Richard Peduzzi and lighting designer André Diot, with all of whom he collaborated in many later productions.[1]

In 1968, he directed The Soldiers by Jakob Michael Reinhold Lenz at the Festival of Youth Theatre in Nancy.[3] In 1969, he staged his first opera production, Rossini's L'italiana in Algeri for the Spoleto Festival, again with his Sartrouville team.[1] The following year he established a close artistic relationship with the leadership of the Piccolo Teatro in Milan, Paolo Grassi and Giorgio Strehler.[3] There, he staged Pablo Neruda's "revolutionary oratorio" The Splendour and Death of Joaquin Murieta.[1] In 1970, he directed Shakespeare's Richard II at the Théâtre de France.[3] His first staging for the Paris Opera was in 1974 Offenbach's Les contes d'Hoffmann.[6][7] He showed Hoffmann, sung by Nicolai Gedda, as a "sensitive poet for whom love is beyond reach, ... a drunken loser".[3] In 1975, he worked in Germany for the first time directing Edward Bond's Lear,[3] set in an "industrial landscape strewn with piles of slag, with Lear as a Baron Krupp in evening dress and top hat".[1] He commented on the "macabre" production: "Just as some people feed on hope, I feed on despair. For me it is a spur to action."[3] Also in 1975, his directorial debut film was the thriller La Chair de l'orchidée, based on James Hadley Chase's 1948 novel The Flesh of the Orchid, sequel to No Orchids for Miss Blandish (1939). The film assembled a starry cast including Edwige Feuillère, Simone Signoret, Alida Valli and Charlotte Rampling[5] "in the [Miss Blandish] role giving a performance of extraordinary intensity. It was an almost operatic version of the misunderstood 1948 British film."[1]

1976: Bayreuth

 
A scene from Götterdämmerung in the 1976 centenary Ring Cycle at the Bayreuth Festival, with Gwyneth Jones as Brünnhilde

In 1976, Chéreau staged Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen at the Bayreuth Festival[8] to celebrate the festival's centenary, termed the Jahrhundertring.[2] The production, celebrating 100 years after Wagner's work had been performed for the first time as a cycle at the first Bayreuth Festival, became known as the Jahrhundertring (Centenary Ring). Chéreau collaborated with conductor Pierre Boulez,[8] who had recommended him to the festival direction. The French team revolutionised the understanding of Wagner in Germany, as music critic Eleonore Büning wrote in her obituary in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.[9] Chéreau set the scene in the time of the composition, with a critical view of the time's capitalism, industrialism and spiritual background. As Büning and others pointed out, the staging left a standard for productions of the Ring Cycle to follow.[9][10] Gerhard R. Koch mentioned in his obituary that the unity of direction, scene and light was new for Bayreuth and suggested a critical view on capitalism heading towards fascism.[7]

In 1977, when heldentenor René Kollo had broken his leg, Chereau acted the role of Siegfried on stage while Kollo sang from the wings.[11]

The Ring production, filmed for television in 1980,[12] initially provoked controversy,[13] but was celebrated after its final performance in 1980 with a 45-minute standing ovation.[2][11] Chéreau disliked grand opera, but said: "After Bayreuth, I felt the need to work on a theatrical project of some breadth ... I have never put on little things. I am interested only in spectacles that rise above themselves". He first considered Goethe's Faust but then directed in 1981 Henrik Ibsen's Peer Gynt for Villeurbane and Paris, aiming at "an incandescence of theatrical experience, a global spectacle".[1]

1979: Paris

Chéreau directed the first performance of the three-act version of Alban Berg's Lulu, completed by Friedrich Cerha, at the Paris Opera on 24 February 1979, again conducted by Boulez and with sets by Peduzzi, with Teresa Stratas singing the title role.[14] The scene is set in the time of the composition, around 1930. Koch observes frequent topics of hunt, and love colder than death (Verfolger und Verfolgte, und Liebe ... kälter als der Tod).[7] Dr. Schön, a powerful newspaper manager, is reminiscent of supporters of Hitler.[7]

1982: Amandiers

From 1982, Chéreau was director of "his own stage" at the Théâtre Nanterre-Amandiers at Nanterre.[1] In 1981 already he staged there Ibsen's Peer Gynt. He was the first to show several plays by Bernard-Marie Koltès, including Combat de nègre et de chiens [fr] and Quai Ouest [fr] (1985), Dans la solitude des champs de coton [fr] (1986) and Le Retour au désert [fr] (1988). He directed Marivaux' La Fausse suivante in 1985 and Shakespeare's Hamlet in 1989, also works by Jean Genet, Heiner Müller and Jean Racine.[6] He staged Mozart's Lucio Silla in 1984, for Amandiers, but also for La Monnaie and La Scala.[citation needed]

At the Odéon he staged in 1992 Le Temps et la Chambre by Botho Strauss. He directed Dans la solitude des champs de coton again in 1995, shown at Ivry, the Wiener Festwochen and the Brooklyn Academy of Music.[citation needed] He staged in 2011 Jon Fosse's Je suis le vent in an English version, I Am the Wind, by Simon Stephens at the Young Vic Theatre, with Tom Brooke and Jack Laskey.[citation needed]

1983: more films

In 1983, Chéreau directed the film The Wounded Man (L'Homme Blessé), a more personal project for him. He and his co-writer, Hervé Guibert, worked for six years on the scenario, which tells of a love affair between an older man involved in prostitution and a teenage boy, a dark view in the context of HIV/AIDS.[5] His 1994 film was La Reine Margot, based on the 1845 historical novel of the same name by Alexandre Dumas. It won the Jury Prize and Best Actress Award (Virna Lisi) at Cannes, as well as five César Awards. Set in the 16th century, depicting the conflict between Catholics and Protestants in France, it shows battles and the St Bartholomew's day massacre. A scene of the queen with the head of her lover is reminiscent of the opera Salome, uniting cult and obsession ("Einheit von Kult und Obsession"), as Koch remarks.[7] The film was Chéreau's longest, most expensive production, and his greatest financial success.[5] "[I]t was erotic and violent, and offers poured in from Hollywood," but, he said, "I was always being offered films based in the Renaissance and involving a massacre. I even had an offer from the UK to do a film about Guy Fawkes."[1] He refused similar offers: "It's useless to repeat something you already did."[3] In 1992, in a rare acting role, he appeared as General Montcalm in Michael Mann's The Last of the Mohicans.[citation needed]

1993: opera internationally

Chéreau's staging of Berg's Wozzeck was shown from 1993 to 1999 at the Théâtre du Châtelet and the Staatsoper Berlin, conducted by Daniel Barenboim, with Franz Grundheber in the title role and Waltraud Meier as Marie. It was filmed in 1994. A review notes the "presentation of even the smallest roles as deeply-considered characters".[12] His staging of Mozart's Don Giovanni was shown from 1994 to 1996 at the Salzburg Festival.[citation needed]

In 1998, he directed the film Those Who Love Me Can Take the Train, a "melodramatic, sentimental and emptily wordy ... about the interplay of assorted characters on their way to the funeral of a misanthropic, bisexual minor painter (Jean-Louis Trintignant)."[5] The final scene reflects the cemetery of Limoges to the music of Mahler's Tenth Symphony.[7]

Chéreau's only English-language film, Intimacy (2001), was based on short stories by Hanif Kureishi[5] (who also wrote the eponymous novel in 1998). The cast includes Kerry Fox, Mark Rylance, Timothy Spall and Marianne Faithfull. The film deals with "the possessiveness of a musician from London who regularly meets a woman for sexual encounters".[3] It "was a tale of sexual obsession which sparked a debate about unsimulated sex on screen.[1] But, Chéreau said, 'It is not like a porno film, not at all erotic sometimes, but it is beautiful because it is life.'"[1]

In 2003, he directed His Brother (Son frère), centred "on the relationship between two estranged brothers, one gay, the other straight. They come together when the latter suffers from a potentially fatal blood disease. The hospital processes are shot unflinchingly, without sentimentality, which makes this meditation on mortality even more moving."[5] Koch notes the similarity of a scene when the moribund is shaved for a last futile surgery he lies on a table similar to Mantegna's Dead Christ.[7] In 2003 Chéreau served at Cannes as president of the jury.[3]

His staging of Mozart's Così fan tutte was shown in 2005 and 2006 in Aix-en-Provence, the Opéra National de Paris and the Wiener Festwochen. In 2007, he staged Wagner's Tristan und Isolde at La Scala, conducted by Daniel Barenboim. He had stayed away from the opera because he regarded it as "predominantly a musical rather than a theatrical work", but his "sombre, subtle direction – with Waltraud Meier an acutely vulnerable Isolde – was intensely moving".[11]

He directed Leoš Janáček's From the House of the Dead, again conducted by Boulez, first shown at the Vienna Festival in 2007, and later at the Holland Festival, the Aix-en-Provence Festival, the Metropolitan Opera (his debut there in 2009)[1] and La Scala.[11] Chéreau's last film was Persécution (2009), "a gloomy, episodic film"[5] about a man who is "haunted by a love-hate relationship with his girlfriend".[3] His last production was Elektra by Richard Strauss, conducted by Esa-Pekka Salonen, shown at the Aix-en-Provence Festival in July 2013[15][16] and scheduled for the MET's 2015–16 season.[1] A review noted: "The clichés of Fascist brutality and expressionist exaggeration are astutely avoided: this is a situation that involves human beings, not caricatures, in a visually neutral environment of bare walls, windows and doors (designed by Richard Peduzzi) which is also blackly portentous in atmosphere."[17]

Personal life and death

Chéreau was in a long-term relationship with his lover and favorite actor Pascal Greggory.[3][18] He was not interested in gay topics, saying: "I never wanted to specialise in gay stories, and gay newspapers have criticised me for that. Everywhere love stories are exactly the same. The game of desire, and how you live with desire, are the same."[1] Chéreau died in Paris on 7 October 2013 from lung cancer. He was 68 years old.[2]

In 2009, Chéreau signed a petition in support of director Roman Polanski, who had been detained while traveling to a film festival in relation to his 1977 sexual abuse charges, which the petition argued would undermine the tradition of film festivals as a place for works to be shown "freely and safely", and that arresting filmmakers traveling to neutral countries could open the door "for actions of which no-one can know the effects."[19][20]

Europe Theatre Prize

Chéreau was awarded the Europe Theatre Prize in 2008, in the Edition XII of the prize. The "Reason for award" noted:

A natural-born artist with a clear calling, Patrice Chéreau is one of those rare examples of a person who manages to succeed in all the expressive arts. ... Patrice Chéreau is an actor himself with the indispensable support of a team of creative collaborators, including the great set designer Richard Peduzzi, costume designer Jacques Schmidt and lighting designer André Diot. Drawn through his analysis of Brecht towards a correct naturalism, Chéreau has discovered and revived a number of little known texts, not least thanks to the many languages he has mastered. His extraordinary critical interpretation of Marivaux broke through the playwright's sunny surface to reveal him as a forward-looking, harsh social critic. ... Meanwhile, Chéreau shifted from theatre to opera, ... a scandalous reinterpretation of Wagner's Ring at Bayreuth ... He reached the height of his career during his many years at the Théâtre des Amandiers in Nanterre, where he developed a new model of expression, discovered and launched one of the great dramatists of our time, Bernard Marie Koltès, whose major works he directed, including Combat de nègre et de chiens and Solitude des champs de coton, as well as Shakespeare, Peer Gynt, Heiner Müller, and the historic revival of Les paravents by Genet. Chéreau eventually turned to cinema, which he found more expressive of the truth of life that he so values.[21]

Filmography

Director

Producer

(for his company "Azor Films")

Actor

Himself

  • Chéreau – L'envers du théâtre (1986)
  • Il était une fois dix neuf acteurs (1987, TV)
  • Patrice Chéreau, Pascal Greggory, une autre solitude (1995, TV)
  • Freedom to speak (2004)

TV guest appearances

  • Bleu, blanc, rose (2002, TV)
  • Claude Berri, le dernier nabab (2003, TV)
  • Thé ou café 14 September 2003

Film awards and nominations

Year Award Category Title Result
2003 7 d'Or Screenwriting (shared with Anne-Louise Trividic) His Brother (2003) Nominated
1996 BAFTA Awards BAFTA Award for Best Film Not in the English Language (shared with Pierre Grunstein) Queen Margot (1994) Nominated
2003 Berlin International Film Festival Golden Bear His Brother (2003) Nominated
Silver Bear for Best Director Won
2001 Golden Bear Intimacy (2001) Won
Silver Bear for Best Actress (Kerry Fox) Won
Blue Angel Won
1998 Cannes Film Festival Palme d'Or Those Who Love Me Can Take the Train (1998) Nominated
1994 Jury Prize Queen Margot (1994)[22] Won
Best Actress Award (Virna Lisi) Won
Palme d'Or Nominated
1983 Palme d'Or The Wounded Man (1983) Nominated
2006 César Awards César Award for Best Adapted Screenplay (shared with Anne-Louise Trividic) Gabrielle (2005) Nominated
2002 César Award for Best Director Intimacy (2001) Nominated
1999 César Award for Best Director Those Who Love Me Can Take the Train (1998) Won
César Award for Best Original Screenplay (shared with Danièle Thompson and Pierre Trividic) Nominated
1995 César Award for Best Film Queen Margot (1994) Nominated
César Award for Best Director Nominated
César for Best Original Screenplay (shared with Danièle Thompson) Nominated
César Award for Best Actress (Isabelle Adjani) Won
César Award for Best Cinematography Won
César Award for Best Costume Design Won
César Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Jean-Hugues Anglade) Won
César Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role (Virna Lisi) Won
César Award for Best Editing Nominated
César Award for Best Music Written for a Film Nominated
César Award for Best Production Design Nominated
César Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role (Dominique Blanc) Nominated
1983 César Award for Best Original Screenplay (shared with Hervé Guibert) The Wounded Man (1983) Won
2009 Chicago International Film Festival Career Achievement Award Won
2005 Gold Hugo Gabrielle (2005) Nominated
1998 Gold Hugo Those Who Love Me Can Take the Train (1998) Nominated
1983 Gold Hugo The Wounded Man (1983) Nominated
1999 Étoiles d'Or Étoiles d'Or for Best Director Those Who Love Me Can Take the Train (1998) Won
2001 European Film Awards Audience Award for Best Director Intimacy (2001) Nominated
2001 Louis Delluc Prize Prix Louis-Delluc Intimacy (2001) Won
2002 Lumières Award Best Director Intimacy (2001) Won
2001 Rio de Janeiro International Film Festival FIPRESCI Prize for Best European Film Intimacy (2001) Won
2008 SACD Awards Won
2009 Venice Film Festival Golden Lion Persécution (2009) Nominated
2005 Golden Lion Gabrielle (2005) Nominated

Main sources

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Kirkup, James (9 October 2013). "Patrice Chéreau: Film, theatre and opera director hailed for his Bayreuth Ring Cycle and for La Reine Margot". The Independent. London. Retrieved 11 October 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d Kozinn, Allan (7 October 2013). "Patrice Chéreau, Opera, Stage and Film Director, Dies at 68". The New York Times. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Patrice Chéreau". The Daily Telegraph (obituary). London. 8 October 2013. Retrieved 11 October 2013.
  4. ^ "L'homme de théâtre Patrice Chéreau est mort" [Dramatist Patrice Chéreau dead]. Le Figaro (in French). Paris. 7 October 2013. Retrieved 11 October 2013.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Bergan, Ronald (8 October 2013). "Patrice Chéreau obituary / Film, opera and stage director known for La Reine Margot and his Ring cycle at Bayreuth in 1976". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 12 October 2013.
  6. ^ a b "Patrice Chéreau" (in French). Théâtre Nanterre-Amandiers. Retrieved 11 October 2013.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Koch, Gerhard R. (9 October 2013). "Der Jäger, der über Grenzen ging". Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (in German). Frankfurt.
  8. ^ a b "French Director Patrice Chéreau, Revered for Wagner's Ring, Dead at 68". Classicalite. 8 October 2013. Retrieved 11 October 2013.
  9. ^ a b Büning, Eleonore (8 October 2013). "Nachruf auf Patrice Chéreau / Erschütterer der Opernwelt". Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (in German). Frankfurt. Retrieved 11 October 2013.
  10. ^ Wise, Brian (7 October 2013). "Patrice Chéreau, Iconoclastic Opera Director, Dies at 68". New York City: WQXR-FM. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  11. ^ a b c d Millington, Barry (8 October 2013). "Patrice Chéreau and the bringing of dramatic conviction to the opera house". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 11 October 2013.
  12. ^ a b Braun, William R. "Berg: Wozzeck". operanews.com. Retrieved 11 October 2013.
  13. ^ "Der Ring-Kampf von Bayreuth". Der Spiegel (in German). Hamburg. 2 August 1976. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
  14. ^ Jarman, Douglas, ed. (1991). Alban Berg. Lulu. Cambridge, England: CUP Archive. p. 48. ISBN 978-0-521-28480-6.
  15. ^ . Aix-en-Provence Festival. Archived from the original on 14 October 2013. Retrieved 12 October 2013.
  16. ^ Ng, David (8 October 2013). "Patrice Chereau, 68, was a major operatic and theatrical force". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 11 October 2013.
  17. ^ Christiansen, Rupert (18 July 2013). "Elektra, Aix Festival, review / Evelyn Herlitzius is mesmerising in the title role of Patrice Chéreau's Elektra, says Rupert Christiansen". The Telegraph. London. Retrieved 12 October 2013.
  18. ^ Moss, Stephen (25 April 2011). "Patrice Chéreau: 'It's OK to be hated'". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  19. ^ "Le cinéma soutient Roman Polanski / Petition for Roman Polanski - SACD". archive.ph. 4 June 2012. Archived from the original on 4 June 2012. Retrieved 20 April 2022.
  20. ^ Shoard, Catherine; Agencies (29 September 2009). "Release Polanski, demands petition by film industry luminaries". The Guardian. from the original on 28 June 2019. Retrieved 12 June 2019.
  21. ^ . Europe Theatre Prize. 2012. Retrieved 9 November 2013.
  22. ^ "Queen Margot". Festival de Cannes. 1994. Retrieved 27 August 2009.

External links

  • Patrice Chéreau at IMDb
  • Literature by and about Patrice Chéreau in the German National Library catalogue
  • Patrice Chéreau film biography at AllMovie by Jason Buchanan
  • "Patrice Chéreau. The 1976 Bayreuth Centenary Ring". wagneroperas.com. 1976.
  • Kienbaum, Jochen (1990). Der Ring des Nibelungen. Bayreuth 1976–1980 / Eine Betrachtung der Inszenierung von Patrice Chéreau und eine Annäherung an das Gesamtkunstwerk (in German). Erlangen-Nürnberg: thesis, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg.
  • "Patrice Chéreau production of classical music for audiovisual media". Unitel Classica. DE.
  • (in French). Opéra national de Paris. Archived from the original on 21 October 2013.

patrice, chéreau, french, tʁis, november, 1944, october, 2013, french, opera, theatre, director, filmmaker, actor, producer, france, best, known, work, theatre, internationally, films, reine, margot, intimacy, staging, jahrhundertring, centenary, ring, cycle, . Patrice Chereau French pa tʁis ʃe ʁo 2 November 1944 7 October 2013 was a French opera and theatre director filmmaker actor and producer In France he is best known for his work for the theatre internationally for his films La Reine Margot and Intimacy and for his staging of the Jahrhundertring the centenary Ring Cycle at the Bayreuth Festival in 1976 Winner of almost twenty movie awards including the Cannes Jury Prize and the Golden Berlin Bear Chereau served as president of the jury at the 2003 Cannes festival Patrice ChereauChereau in 2009Born 1944 11 02 2 November 1944Lezigne Maine et Loire FranceDied7 October 2013 2013 10 07 aged 68 Paris FranceOccupationsTheatre directoropera directorfilm directoractorscreenwritertelevision producerYears active1966 2013AwardsCesar Award for Best Original Screenplay 1983 Cannes Jury Prize 1994 Cesar Award for Best Director 1998 Golden Berlin Bear 2001 Silver Berlin Bear for Best Director 2003 Europe Theatre Prize 2008 From 1966 he was artistic director of the Public Theatre in the Parisian suburb of Sartrouville where in his team were stage designer Richard Peduzzi costume designer Jacques Schmidt and lighting designer Andre Diot with whom he collaborated in many later productions From 1982 he was director of his own stage at the Theatre Nanterre Amandiers at Nanterre where he staged plays by Jean Racine Marivaux and Shakespeare as well as works by Jean Genet Heiner Muller and Bernard Marie Koltes He accepted selected opera productions such as the first performance of the three act version of Alban Berg s Lulu completed by Friedrich Cerha at the Paris Opera in 1979 Berg s Wozzeck at the Staatsoper Berlin in 1994 Wagner s Tristan und Isolde at La Scala in 2007 Janacek s From the House of the Dead shown at several festivals and the Metropolitan Opera and as his last staging Elektra by Richard Strauss first performed at the Aix en Provence Festival in July 2013 He was awarded the Europe Theatre Prize in 2008 Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Early life 1 2 1966 Sartrouville 1 3 1976 Bayreuth 1 4 1979 Paris 1 5 1982 Amandiers 1 6 1983 more films 1 7 1993 opera internationally 1 8 Personal life and death 2 Europe Theatre Prize 3 Filmography 3 1 Director 3 2 Producer 3 3 Actor 3 4 Himself 3 5 TV guest appearances 4 Film awards and nominations 5 References 6 External linksLife and career EditEarly life Edit Chereau was born in Lezigne Maine et Loire His father Jean Baptiste Chereau was a painter and his mother Marguerite Pelicier was a graphic designer He attended school in Paris Early on he was taken to the Louvre and became interested in the arts cinema theatre and music At age 12 he designed stage sets for plays 1 He became well known to Parisian critics as director actor and stage manager of his high school theatre lycee Louis le Grand At 15 he was enthusiastically celebrated as a theatre prodigy In 1964 at the age of 19 he began directing for the professional theatre 2 While studying at the Sorbonne he professionally staged Victor Hugo s L Intervention and subsequently dropped out of the university 3 1966 Sartrouville Edit Jacques Schmidt costume designer In 1966 Chereau was appointed artistic director of the Public Theatre in the Parisian suburb of Sartrouville 4 5 With idealism and inventiveness he made the theatre a municipal commodity presenting not only theatre but also cinema concerts poetry productions lectures and debates about everything from politics to pot 1 His theatrical team included costume designer Jacques Schmidt stage designer Richard Peduzzi and lighting designer Andre Diot with all of whom he collaborated in many later productions 1 In 1968 he directed The Soldiers by Jakob Michael Reinhold Lenz at the Festival of Youth Theatre in Nancy 3 In 1969 he staged his first opera production Rossini s L italiana in Algeri for the Spoleto Festival again with his Sartrouville team 1 The following year he established a close artistic relationship with the leadership of the Piccolo Teatro in Milan Paolo Grassi and Giorgio Strehler 3 There he staged Pablo Neruda s revolutionary oratorio The Splendour and Death of Joaquin Murieta 1 In 1970 he directed Shakespeare s Richard II at the Theatre de France 3 His first staging for the Paris Opera was in 1974 Offenbach s Les contes d Hoffmann 6 7 He showed Hoffmann sung by Nicolai Gedda as a sensitive poet for whom love is beyond reach a drunken loser 3 In 1975 he worked in Germany for the first time directing Edward Bond s Lear 3 set in an industrial landscape strewn with piles of slag with Lear as a Baron Krupp in evening dress and top hat 1 He commented on the macabre production Just as some people feed on hope I feed on despair For me it is a spur to action 3 Also in 1975 his directorial debut film was the thriller La Chair de l orchidee based on James Hadley Chase s 1948 novel The Flesh of the Orchid sequel to No Orchids for Miss Blandish 1939 The film assembled a starry cast including Edwige Feuillere Simone Signoret Alida Valli and Charlotte Rampling 5 in the Miss Blandish role giving a performance of extraordinary intensity It was an almost operatic version of the misunderstood 1948 British film 1 1976 Bayreuth Edit A scene from Gotterdammerung in the 1976 centenary Ring Cycle at the Bayreuth Festival with Gwyneth Jones as Brunnhilde In 1976 Chereau staged Wagner s Der Ring des Nibelungen at the Bayreuth Festival 8 to celebrate the festival s centenary termed the Jahrhundertring 2 The production celebrating 100 years after Wagner s work had been performed for the first time as a cycle at the first Bayreuth Festival became known as the Jahrhundertring Centenary Ring Chereau collaborated with conductor Pierre Boulez 8 who had recommended him to the festival direction The French team revolutionised the understanding of Wagner in Germany as music critic Eleonore Buning wrote in her obituary in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 9 Chereau set the scene in the time of the composition with a critical view of the time s capitalism industrialism and spiritual background As Buning and others pointed out the staging left a standard for productions of the Ring Cycle to follow 9 10 Gerhard R Koch mentioned in his obituary that the unity of direction scene and light was new for Bayreuth and suggested a critical view on capitalism heading towards fascism 7 In 1977 when heldentenor Rene Kollo had broken his leg Chereau acted the role of Siegfried on stage while Kollo sang from the wings 11 The Ring production filmed for television in 1980 12 initially provoked controversy 13 but was celebrated after its final performance in 1980 with a 45 minute standing ovation 2 11 Chereau disliked grand opera but said After Bayreuth I felt the need to work on a theatrical project of some breadth I have never put on little things I am interested only in spectacles that rise above themselves He first considered Goethe s Faust but then directed in 1981 Henrik Ibsen s Peer Gynt for Villeurbane and Paris aiming at an incandescence of theatrical experience a global spectacle 1 1979 Paris Edit Chereau directed the first performance of the three act version of Alban Berg s Lulu completed by Friedrich Cerha at the Paris Opera on 24 February 1979 again conducted by Boulez and with sets by Peduzzi with Teresa Stratas singing the title role 14 The scene is set in the time of the composition around 1930 Koch observes frequent topics of hunt and love colder than death Verfolger und Verfolgte und Liebe kalter als der Tod 7 Dr Schon a powerful newspaper manager is reminiscent of supporters of Hitler 7 1982 Amandiers Edit From 1982 Chereau was director of his own stage at the Theatre Nanterre Amandiers at Nanterre 1 In 1981 already he staged there Ibsen s Peer Gynt He was the first to show several plays by Bernard Marie Koltes including Combat de negre et de chiens fr and Quai Ouest fr 1985 Dans la solitude des champs de coton fr 1986 and Le Retour au desert fr 1988 He directed Marivaux La Fausse suivante in 1985 and Shakespeare s Hamlet in 1989 also works by Jean Genet Heiner Muller and Jean Racine 6 He staged Mozart s Lucio Silla in 1984 for Amandiers but also for La Monnaie and La Scala citation needed At the Odeon he staged in 1992 Le Temps et la Chambre by Botho Strauss He directed Dans la solitude des champs de coton again in 1995 shown at Ivry the Wiener Festwochen and the Brooklyn Academy of Music citation needed He staged in 2011 Jon Fosse s Je suis le vent in an English version I Am the Wind by Simon Stephens at the Young Vic Theatre with Tom Brooke and Jack Laskey citation needed 1983 more films Edit In 1983 Chereau directed the film The Wounded Man L Homme Blesse a more personal project for him He and his co writer Herve Guibert worked for six years on the scenario which tells of a love affair between an older man involved in prostitution and a teenage boy a dark view in the context of HIV AIDS 5 His 1994 film was La Reine Margot based on the 1845 historical novel of the same name by Alexandre Dumas It won the Jury Prize and Best Actress Award Virna Lisi at Cannes as well as five Cesar Awards Set in the 16th century depicting the conflict between Catholics and Protestants in France it shows battles and the St Bartholomew s day massacre A scene of the queen with the head of her lover is reminiscent of the opera Salome uniting cult and obsession Einheit von Kult und Obsession as Koch remarks 7 The film was Chereau s longest most expensive production and his greatest financial success 5 I t was erotic and violent and offers poured in from Hollywood but he said I was always being offered films based in the Renaissance and involving a massacre I even had an offer from the UK to do a film about Guy Fawkes 1 He refused similar offers It s useless to repeat something you already did 3 In 1992 in a rare acting role he appeared as General Montcalm in Michael Mann s The Last of the Mohicans citation needed 1993 opera internationally Edit Chereau s staging of Berg s Wozzeck was shown from 1993 to 1999 at the Theatre du Chatelet and the Staatsoper Berlin conducted by Daniel Barenboim with Franz Grundheber in the title role and Waltraud Meier as Marie It was filmed in 1994 A review notes the presentation of even the smallest roles as deeply considered characters 12 His staging of Mozart s Don Giovanni was shown from 1994 to 1996 at the Salzburg Festival citation needed Jean Hugues Anglade Chereau and Romain Duris at the Venice Film Festival 2009 In 1998 he directed the film Those Who Love Me Can Take the Train a melodramatic sentimental and emptily wordy about the interplay of assorted characters on their way to the funeral of a misanthropic bisexual minor painter Jean Louis Trintignant 5 The final scene reflects the cemetery of Limoges to the music of Mahler s Tenth Symphony 7 Chereau s only English language film Intimacy 2001 was based on short stories by Hanif Kureishi 5 who also wrote the eponymous novel in 1998 The cast includes Kerry Fox Mark Rylance Timothy Spall and Marianne Faithfull The film deals with the possessiveness of a musician from London who regularly meets a woman for sexual encounters 3 It was a tale of sexual obsession which sparked a debate about unsimulated sex on screen 1 But Chereau said It is not like a porno film not at all erotic sometimes but it is beautiful because it is life 1 In 2003 he directed His Brother Son frere centred on the relationship between two estranged brothers one gay the other straight They come together when the latter suffers from a potentially fatal blood disease The hospital processes are shot unflinchingly without sentimentality which makes this meditation on mortality even more moving 5 Koch notes the similarity of a scene when the moribund is shaved for a last futile surgery he lies on a table similar to Mantegna s Dead Christ 7 In 2003 Chereau served at Cannes as president of the jury 3 His staging of Mozart s Cosi fan tutte was shown in 2005 and 2006 in Aix en Provence the Opera National de Paris and the Wiener Festwochen In 2007 he staged Wagner s Tristan und Isolde at La Scala conducted by Daniel Barenboim He had stayed away from the opera because he regarded it as predominantly a musical rather than a theatrical work but his sombre subtle direction with Waltraud Meier an acutely vulnerable Isolde was intensely moving 11 He directed Leos Janacek s From the House of the Dead again conducted by Boulez first shown at the Vienna Festival in 2007 and later at the Holland Festival the Aix en Provence Festival the Metropolitan Opera his debut there in 2009 1 and La Scala 11 Chereau s last film was Persecution 2009 a gloomy episodic film 5 about a man who is haunted by a love hate relationship with his girlfriend 3 His last production was Elektra by Richard Strauss conducted by Esa Pekka Salonen shown at the Aix en Provence Festival in July 2013 15 16 and scheduled for the MET s 2015 16 season 1 A review noted The cliches of Fascist brutality and expressionist exaggeration are astutely avoided this is a situation that involves human beings not caricatures in a visually neutral environment of bare walls windows and doors designed by Richard Peduzzi which is also blackly portentous in atmosphere 17 Personal life and death Edit Chereau was in a long term relationship with his lover and favorite actor Pascal Greggory 3 18 He was not interested in gay topics saying I never wanted to specialise in gay stories and gay newspapers have criticised me for that Everywhere love stories are exactly the same The game of desire and how you live with desire are the same 1 Chereau died in Paris on 7 October 2013 from lung cancer He was 68 years old 2 In 2009 Chereau signed a petition in support of director Roman Polanski who had been detained while traveling to a film festival in relation to his 1977 sexual abuse charges which the petition argued would undermine the tradition of film festivals as a place for works to be shown freely and safely and that arresting filmmakers traveling to neutral countries could open the door for actions of which no one can know the effects 19 20 Europe Theatre Prize EditChereau was awarded the Europe Theatre Prize in 2008 in the Edition XII of the prize The Reason for award noted A natural born artist with a clear calling Patrice Chereau is one of those rare examples of a person who manages to succeed in all the expressive arts Patrice Chereau is an actor himself with the indispensable support of a team of creative collaborators including the great set designer Richard Peduzzi costume designer Jacques Schmidt and lighting designer Andre Diot Drawn through his analysis of Brecht towards a correct naturalism Chereau has discovered and revived a number of little known texts not least thanks to the many languages he has mastered His extraordinary critical interpretation of Marivaux broke through the playwright s sunny surface to reveal him as a forward looking harsh social critic Meanwhile Chereau shifted from theatre to opera a scandalous reinterpretation of Wagner s Ring at Bayreuth He reached the height of his career during his many years at the Theatre des Amandiers in Nanterre where he developed a new model of expression discovered and launched one of the great dramatists of our time Bernard Marie Koltes whose major works he directed including Combat de negre et de chiens and Solitude des champs de coton as well as Shakespeare Peer Gynt Heiner Muller and the historic revival of Les paravents by Genet Chereau eventually turned to cinema which he found more expressive of the truth of life that he so values 21 Filmography EditDirector Edit La Chair de l orchidee 1975 Judith Therpauve 1978 L Homme blesse 1983 Hotel de France 1986 Contre l oubli 1991 Queen Margot 1994 Dans la solitude des champs de coton 1996 TV version Those Who Love Me Can Take the Train 1998 Intimacy 2001 His Brother 2003 Gabrielle 2005 Persecution 2009 Producer Edit for his company Azor Films L Homme blesse 1983 Chereau L envers du theatre 1986 TV documentary Patrice Chereau Pascal Greggory une autre solitude 1995 TV documentary Intimacy 2001 Son frere 2003 Gabrielle 2005 Cosi fan tutte 2005 TV Actor Edit Trotsky 1967 by Jacques Kebadian Danton 1982 by Andrzej Wajda as Camille Desmoulins Adieu Bonaparte 1985 by Youssef Chahine as Napoleon Bonaparte The Last of the Mohicans 1992 by Michael Mann as General Montcalm Bete de scene 1994 Short by Bernard Nissille as Le metteur en scene Dans la solitude des champs de coton 1996 TV version as Le dealer Lucie Aubrac 1997 by Claude Berri as Max Time Regained 1999 by Raoul Ruiz as Marcel Proust voice Nearest to Heaven 2002 by Tonie Marshall as Pierre Time of the Wolf 2003 by Michael Haneke as Thomas Brandt final film role Himself Edit Chereau L envers du theatre 1986 Il etait une fois dix neuf acteurs 1987 TV Patrice Chereau Pascal Greggory une autre solitude 1995 TV Freedom to speak 2004 TV guest appearances Edit Bleu blanc rose 2002 TV Claude Berri le dernier nabab 2003 TV The ou cafe 14 September 2003Film awards and nominations EditYear Award Category Title Result2003 7 d Or Screenwriting shared with Anne Louise Trividic His Brother 2003 Nominated1996 BAFTA Awards BAFTA Award for Best Film Not in the English Language shared with Pierre Grunstein Queen Margot 1994 Nominated2003 Berlin International Film Festival Golden Bear His Brother 2003 NominatedSilver Bear for Best Director Won2001 Golden Bear Intimacy 2001 WonSilver Bear for Best Actress Kerry Fox WonBlue Angel Won1998 Cannes Film Festival Palme d Or Those Who Love Me Can Take the Train 1998 Nominated1994 Jury Prize Queen Margot 1994 22 WonBest Actress Award Virna Lisi WonPalme d Or Nominated1983 Palme d Or The Wounded Man 1983 Nominated2006 Cesar Awards Cesar Award for Best Adapted Screenplay shared with Anne Louise Trividic Gabrielle 2005 Nominated2002 Cesar Award for Best Director Intimacy 2001 Nominated1999 Cesar Award for Best Director Those Who Love Me Can Take the Train 1998 WonCesar Award for Best Original Screenplay shared with Daniele Thompson and Pierre Trividic Nominated1995 Cesar Award for Best Film Queen Margot 1994 NominatedCesar Award for Best Director NominatedCesar for Best Original Screenplay shared with Daniele Thompson NominatedCesar Award for Best Actress Isabelle Adjani WonCesar Award for Best Cinematography WonCesar Award for Best Costume Design WonCesar Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role Jean Hugues Anglade WonCesar Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role Virna Lisi WonCesar Award for Best Editing NominatedCesar Award for Best Music Written for a Film NominatedCesar Award for Best Production Design NominatedCesar Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role Dominique Blanc Nominated1983 Cesar Award for Best Original Screenplay shared with Herve Guibert The Wounded Man 1983 Won2009 Chicago International Film Festival Career Achievement Award Won2005 Gold Hugo Gabrielle 2005 Nominated1998 Gold Hugo Those Who Love Me Can Take the Train 1998 Nominated1983 Gold Hugo The Wounded Man 1983 Nominated1999 Etoiles d Or Etoiles d Or for Best Director Those Who Love Me Can Take the Train 1998 Won2001 European Film Awards Audience Award for Best Director Intimacy 2001 Nominated2001 Louis Delluc Prize Prix Louis Delluc Intimacy 2001 Won2002 Lumieres Award Best Director Intimacy 2001 Won2001 Rio de Janeiro International Film Festival FIPRESCI Prize for Best European Film Intimacy 2001 Won2008 SACD Awards Won2009 Venice Film Festival Golden Lion Persecution 2009 Nominated2005 Golden Lion Gabrielle 2005 NominatedMain sources Patrice Chereau Awards at the Internet Movie Database unreliable source Patrice Chereau Awards at Allmovie References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Kirkup James 9 October 2013 Patrice Chereau Film theatre and opera director hailed for his Bayreuth Ring Cycle and for La Reine Margot The Independent London Retrieved 11 October 2013 a b c d Kozinn Allan 7 October 2013 Patrice Chereau Opera Stage and Film Director Dies at 68 The New York Times Retrieved 8 October 2013 a b c d e f g h i j k l Patrice Chereau The Daily Telegraph obituary London 8 October 2013 Retrieved 11 October 2013 L homme de theatre Patrice Chereau est mort Dramatist Patrice Chereau dead Le Figaro in French Paris 7 October 2013 Retrieved 11 October 2013 a b c d e f g h Bergan Ronald 8 October 2013 Patrice Chereau obituary Film opera and stage director known for La Reine Margot and his Ring cycle at Bayreuth in 1976 The Guardian London Retrieved 12 October 2013 a b Patrice Chereau in French Theatre Nanterre Amandiers Retrieved 11 October 2013 a b c d e f g Koch Gerhard R 9 October 2013 Der Jager der uber Grenzen ging Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung in German Frankfurt a b French Director Patrice Chereau Revered for Wagner s Ring Dead at 68 Classicalite 8 October 2013 Retrieved 11 October 2013 a b Buning Eleonore 8 October 2013 Nachruf auf Patrice Chereau Erschutterer der Opernwelt Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung in German Frankfurt Retrieved 11 October 2013 Wise Brian 7 October 2013 Patrice Chereau Iconoclastic Opera Director Dies at 68 New York City WQXR FM Retrieved 8 October 2013 a b c d Millington Barry 8 October 2013 Patrice Chereau and the bringing of dramatic conviction to the opera house The Guardian London Retrieved 11 October 2013 a b Braun William R Berg Wozzeck operanews com Retrieved 11 October 2013 Der Ring Kampf von Bayreuth Der Spiegel in German Hamburg 2 August 1976 Retrieved 13 October 2013 Jarman Douglas ed 1991 Alban Berg Lulu Cambridge England CUP Archive p 48 ISBN 978 0 521 28480 6 Richard Strauss 1864 1949 Elektra Aix en Provence Festival Archived from the original on 14 October 2013 Retrieved 12 October 2013 Ng David 8 October 2013 Patrice Chereau 68 was a major operatic and theatrical force Los Angeles Times Retrieved 11 October 2013 Christiansen Rupert 18 July 2013 Elektra Aix Festival review Evelyn Herlitzius is mesmerising in the title role of Patrice Chereau s Elektra says Rupert Christiansen The Telegraph London Retrieved 12 October 2013 Moss Stephen 25 April 2011 Patrice Chereau It s OK to be hated The Guardian London Retrieved 8 October 2013 Le cinema soutient Roman Polanski Petition for Roman Polanski SACD archive ph 4 June 2012 Archived from the original on 4 June 2012 Retrieved 20 April 2022 Shoard Catherine Agencies 29 September 2009 Release Polanski demands petition by film industry luminaries The Guardian Archived from the original on 28 June 2019 Retrieved 12 June 2019 Patrice Chereau Reason for award Europe Theatre Prize 2012 Retrieved 9 November 2013 Queen Margot Festival de Cannes 1994 Retrieved 27 August 2009 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Patrice Chereau Patrice Chereau at IMDb Literature by and about Patrice Chereau in the German National Library catalogue Patrice Chereau film biography at AllMovie by Jason Buchanan Patrice Chereau The 1976 Bayreuth Centenary Ring wagneroperas com 1976 Kienbaum Jochen 1990 Der Ring des Nibelungen Bayreuth 1976 1980 Eine Betrachtung der Inszenierung von Patrice Chereau und eine Annaherung an das Gesamtkunstwerk in German Erlangen Nurnberg thesis Friedrich Alexander Universitat Erlangen Nurnberg Patrice Chereau production of classical music for audiovisual media Unitel Classica DE Hommage a Patrice Chereau with slideshow in French Opera national de Paris Archived from the original on 21 October 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Patrice Chereau amp oldid 1142518868, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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