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Romy Schneider

Romy Schneider (German: [ˈʁoː.mi ˈʃnaɪ̯.dɐ] (listen); born Rosemarie Magdalena Albach; 23 September 1938 – 29 May 1982) was a German-French[1] actress. She began her career in the German Heimatfilm genre in the early 1950s when she was 15. From 1955 to 1957, she played the central character of Empress Elisabeth of Austria in the Austrian Sissi trilogy, and later reprised the role in a more mature version in Luchino Visconti's Ludwig (1973). Schneider moved to France, where she made successful and critically acclaimed films with some of the most notable film directors of that era.

Romy Schneider
Schneider in 1973
Born
Rosemarie Magdalena Albach

(1938-09-23)23 September 1938
Died29 May 1982(1982-05-29) (aged 43)
Paris, France
Burial placeBoissy-sans-Avoir, Yvelines, France
Other namesRomy Schneider-Albach
OccupationActress
Years active1953–1982
Spouse(s)
(m. 1966; div. 1975)

Daniel Biasini
(m. 1975; div. 1981)
Partner(s)Alain Delon (1958–1963)
Laurent Pétin [fr] (1981–1982; her death)
Children2, including Sarah Biasini
Parent(s)Wolf Albach-Retty (father)
Magda Schneider (mother)
RelativesRosa Albach-Retty (grandmother)

Early life

Schneider was born Rosemarie Magdalena Albach in Vienna, six months after the Anschluss of Austria into Nazi Germany, to actors Magda Schneider and Wolf Albach-Retty. Her paternal grandmother, Rosa Albach-Retty, was also an actress. Schneider's mother was German while her father was Austrian.

Four weeks after Romy's birth, the parents brought her to Schönau am Königssee in Germany where she and later her brother Wolf-Dieter (born 1941) grew up with their grandparents Franz Xaver and Maria Schneider on the country estate Mariengrund. In her first year, Romy was cared for by a governess. Her parents were very rarely present due to their acting engagements. In 1943, they separated and were divorced in 1945.[2][3]

In September 1944, Schneider was enrolled in the elementary school of Schönau and from July 1949 she attended the girls' boarding school at Castle Goldenstein [de], a private secondary school of the Augustinian Canonesses of the Congregation of Notre Dame in Elsbethen near Salzburg. Already during her schooldays, she discovered her passion for acting which is why she was often on stage at theatrical performances at the residential school. In her diary entry of 10 June 1952, she wrote: "If it were up to me, I would immediately become an actress. ... Every time I see a nice movie, my first thoughts are about the idea: I definitely have to become an actress. Yes! I have to!"[4] On 12 July 1953, she left the residential school Goldenstein with the degree of Mittlere Reife. After the summer holidays, she moved to Cologne to join her mother who lived there with the restaurateur and entrepreneur Hans Herbert Blatzheim [de].[5]

After her parents' divorce in 1945, Magda took charge of Romy and her brother Wolf-Dieter, eventually supervising the young girl's career, often appearing alongside her daughter. Her career was also overseen by her stepfather Blatzheim who, Schneider indicated, had an unhealthy interest in her.[6][7][8][9][10]

Early career

 
Schneider as Elisabeth of Austria in Sissi (1955)

Romy Schneider's first film, made when she was 15, was When the White Lilacs Bloom Again (1953), credited as Romy Schneider-Albach. In 1954, Schneider, for the first time, portrayed a royal, playing a young Queen Victoria in the Austrian film Mädchenjahre einer Königin (known in the U.S. as The Story of Vickie and in Britain as Victoria in Dover).

Schneider's breakthrough came with her portrayal of Empress Elisabeth of Austria in the romantic biopic Sissi (1955) and its two sequels, Sissi – The Young Empress (1956) and Sissi – Fateful Years of an Empress (1957), all with Karlheinz Böhm, who became a close friend. Less stereotypical films during this busy period include The Girl and the Legend (1957), working with a young Horst Buchholz, and Monpti (1957), directed by Helmut Käutner, again with Buchholz.

 
Schneider on the set of What's New Pussycat? (1965)

Schneider soon starred in Christine (1958), a remake of Max Ophüls's 1933 film Liebelei (in which her mother Magda Schneider had played the same role). It was during the filming of Christine that Schneider fell in love with French actor Alain Delon who co-starred in the movie. She left Germany to join him in Paris, and they announced their engagement in 1959.[11]

Schneider decided to live and to work in France, slowly gaining the interest of film directors such as Orson Welles for The Trial (1962), based on Franz Kafka's The Trial. She was also introduced to Luchino Visconti. Under Visconti's direction, she gave performances in the Théâtre Moderne as Annabella (and Delon as Giovanni) in John Ford's stage play 'Tis Pity She's a Whore (1961), and in the film Boccaccio '70 (segment: "The Job"). In 1962, Schneider played Anna in Sacha Pitoëff's production of Chekhov's play The Seagull, also at the Théâtre Moderne.

A brief stint in Hollywood included a starring role in Good Neighbor Sam (1964), a comedy with Jack Lemmon, and What's New Pussycat? (1965), in which Schneider co-starred with Peter O'Toole, Peter Sellers, and Woody Allen.

 
Schneider and German Chancellor Willy Brandt, 1971

Schneider and Delon decided to separate in December 1963, although they remained close life-long friends. They continued to work together in such films as La Piscine (The Swimming Pool, 1968) and The Assassination of Trotsky (1972).

Later career

 
Schneider during the filming of La califfa (1970)

Schneider continued to work in France during the 1970s, most notably with director Claude Sautet on five films. Their first collaboration, The Things of Life (Les choses de la vie, 1970) featuring Michel Piccoli, made Schneider an icon in France. The three collaborated again for the noir thriller Max et les ferrailleurs (Max and the Junkmen, 1971), and she appeared with Yves Montand in Sautet's César et Rosalie (1972).

Paris Match wrote 1971: "Forty years after Greta and Marlene, fifteen years after Marilyn, the screen again has a great star."[12]

Schneider portrayed a more mature and realistic Elisabeth of Austria in Ludwig (1973), Visconti's film about the life of King Ludwig II of Bavaria. "Sissi sticks to me just like oatmeal", Schneider once said.[13]

Other successes from this period included Le Train (1973), Claude Chabrol's thriller Innocents with Dirty Hands (Les innocents aux mains sales, 1975) with Rod Steiger, and Le vieux fusil (1975). The gritty That Most Important Thing: Love (L'important c'est d'aimer, 1974) garnered her first César Award (France's equivalent of the Oscar), a feat she repeated five years later, in her last collaboration with Sautet, for A Simple Story (Une histoire simple, 1978).

On 30 October 1974, Schneider created one of the most memorable moments on German television. She was the second guest on Dietmar Schönherr's talk show Je später der Abend [de] (The Later the Evening) when she, after a rather terse interview, remarked passionately to the last guest, bank robber and author Burkhard Driest: "Sie gefallen mir. Sie gefallen mir sehr." (I like you. I like you a lot.)[14][15][16]

She also acted in The Infernal Trio (1974) with Michel Piccoli, and in Garde à vue (1981) with Michel Serrault and Lino Ventura. An unpleasant incident occurred during this period with leading German film director Rainer Werner Fassbinder, who wanted to cast her as the lead in his film The Marriage of Maria Braun (1979). Negotiations broke down when he called Schneider a "dumb cow",[17] to which she responded by declaring she would never work with such a "beast".[18] Fassbinder cast Hanna Schygulla instead, reviving his professional association with an actress to whom he had also been offensive.[17]

Schneider starred in Bertrand Tavernier's Death Watch (La mort en direct, 1980), playing a dying woman whose last days are watched on national television via a camera implanted in the brain of a journalist (Harvey Keitel). It is based on David G. Compton's novel. Schneider's last film was La Passante du Sans-Souci (The Passerby, 1982).

Personal life

Following the end of her relationship with Delon, Schneider married German director and actor Harry Meyen in July 1966; they later divorced. The couple had a son, David Christopher (1966–1981). In July 1981, David died at the age of 14 after attempting to climb the spiked fence at his stepfather's parents' home and puncturing his femoral artery in the process.[19] She had love affairs with Oswalt Kolle (1964)[20] and actor Bruno Ganz (early 1970s).[21] She had a brief affair with Jean-Louis Trintignant while filming The Train (1973).[22] She also had in 1974 a brief affair with Jacques Dutronc while filming That Most Important Thing: Love.[23]

Schneider appeared as one of 28 women under the banner "We've had abortions!" (German: Wir haben abgetrieben!) on the cover page of the West German magazine Stern on 6 June 1971. In that issue, 374 women publicly stated that they had had pregnancies terminated which at that time was illegal.[24]

In 1975, Schneider married Daniel Biasini [fr], her private secretary; they divorced in 1981. Their daughter, Sarah, is an actress. Her last romantic partner was film producer Laurent Pétin [fr] (born 1949).[25]

In her 2018 biography Romy Schneider intime, Alice Schwarzer revealed that Schneider confided to her that she had sexual relationships with women and was deeply in love with her close friend Simone Signoret.[26]

Death

 
Grave of Romy Schneider and her son in Boissy-sans-Avoir

Schneider began drinking alcohol excessively after her son's death. However, Schneider's friend and sister of Laurent Pétin, Claude Pétin, said that she no longer drank at the time of her death[27] and that she is convinced it was a natural death.[25]

Schneider was found dead in her Paris apartment on 29 May 1982. The examining magistrate Laurent Davenas [fr] declared that she died from cardiac arrest.[28] Claude Pétin said that Schneider's cardiac arrest was due to a weakened heart caused by a kidney operation she had months before.[27]

Her tombstone at Boissy-sans-Avoir, Yvelines, bears her birth name, Rosemarie Albach. Funeral guests were Jean-Claude Brialy, Michel Piccoli, Jean-Loup Dabadie, Jean Rochefort,[29][30] Claude Sautet, Claude Lelouch, Gérard Depardieu, her brother Wolf-Dieter, former husband Daniel Biasini, and Laurent Pétin[citation needed]. Shortly afterwards, Alain Delon arranged for her son David to be buried in the same grave.[31]

Enduring popularity

The French journalist Eugène Moineau initiated in 1984 the Prix Romy Schneider. It is one of the most prestigious awards for upcoming actresses in the French film industry, and is given by a jury each year in Paris in conjunction with the Prix Patrick Dewaere (formerly the Prix Jean Gabin). In 1990, the Austrian newspaper Kurier created the Romy TV Award in honour of Schneider. In 2003, she was voted 78th on the list of the greatest Germans in the German TV program Unsere Besten (the German version of 100 Greatest Britons)—the second-highest ranked actress (Marlene Dietrich was 50th) on that list. Until 2002, the Austrian Federal Railways InterCity service IC 535 from Wien Südbahnhof to Graz was named "Romy Schneider".[32][33]

A movie about Schneider's life, titled Eine Frau wie Romy/Une femme comme Romy (A Woman Like Romy), was planned by Warner Bros. for 2009; Schneider's role was going to be played by Yvonne Catterfeld.[34][35] The project was cancelled in July 2009.[36] A musical about Schneider, Romy – Die Welt aus Gold (Romy – The Golden World) was premiered in 2009 at the Theater Heilbronn.[37] In November 2009, the ARD broadcast the feature film Romy [de] with Jessica Schwarz in the title role.[38] The film 3 Days in Quiberon (2018) by Emily Atef describes a 1981 episode in Schneider's life in the French town of Quiberon.[39]

On 23 September 2020, Google celebrated her 82nd birthday with a Google Doodle in Germany, France, Austria, Iceland and Ukraine.[40]

The culture broadcaster ARTE dedicated a documentary to Romy Schneider and Alain Delon: Romy and Alain – The Eternal Betrothed, 2022.[41]

Filmography

Awards

Awards named after Romy Schneider

References

  1. ^ "Isabelle Giordano : 'Romy Schneider était toutes les femmes à la fois' ", by David Abiker, Europe 1, 7 October 2017 (in French)
  2. ^ Wolfgang Jacobsen: "Schneider, Romy" in Neue Deutsche Biographie. pp. 306–308 (307) (in German)
  3. ^ Renate Seydel [de; fr]: Ich, Romy – Tagebuch eines Lebens, p. 27. Piper, Munich 2005 ISBN 9783492228756 (in German)
  4. ^ "Die Königin der Schmerzen" by Matthias Matussek [de] and Lars-Olav Beier, Der Spiegel, 21 May 2007 (in German)
  5. ^ "Romy Schneider" by Dieter Wunderlich (in German)
  6. ^ (in French). pipole.net. Archived from the original on 30 October 2007. Retrieved 28 October 2007. Romy témoignant par la suite de l'intérêt malsain qu'il lui portait.
  7. ^ "Biography and career" (in Dutch). SeniorPlaza.nl. Retrieved 28 October 2007. waarvan Romy later aangaf dat hij een ongezonde belangstelling voor haar had
  8. ^ Surkus, Andrea. . Süddeutsche Zeitung (in German). Archived from the original on 4 November 2007. Retrieved 28 October 2007. und will mit ihr schlafen
  9. ^ Gretter, Susanne. "Biography" (in German and French). FemBio Frauen-Biographieforschung e.V. Retrieved 28 October 2007. Il a clairement proposé de coucher avec moi.
  10. ^ Leinkauf, Thomas (19 September 1998). . Berliner Zeitung (in German). Archived from the original on 19 January 2008. Retrieved 28 October 2007. Blatzheim in ihrer Jugend mit ihr schlafen wollte.
  11. ^ Nick Rees-Roberts; Darren Waldron, eds. (2015). Alain Delon: Style, Stardom and Masculinity. Bloomsbury USA. p. 52. ISBN 9781623564452.
  12. ^ Alice Schwarzer (2018). Romy Schneider intime (in French). L'Archipel. p. 104. ISBN 9782809824988. Translation of Romy Schneider: Mythos und Leben (Kiepenheuer & Witsch, 2008)
  13. ^ . wieninternational.at (in German). Archived from the original on 21 November 2007. Retrieved 19 December 2007. Sissi pappt an mir wie Griesbrei
  14. ^ "Und retten kann uns nur Heinz Schenk". Stern (in German). 9 August 2007. Retrieved 26 March 2011.
  15. ^ Beier, Lars-Olav (23 May 2007). "Die Berührbare". Der Spiegel (in German). Retrieved 14 February 2008.
  16. ^ Je später der Abend: Burkhard Driest and Romy Schneider on YouTube, (October 1974, 29 seconds) (in German)
  17. ^ a b Malcolm, Derek (28 January 1999). "Rainer Werner Fassbinder: The Marriage of Maria Braun". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  18. ^ Anderson, Jason (26 October 2016). "Nothing Left to Lose". Toronto International Film Festival. Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  19. ^ "The son of actress Romy Schneider was killed Sunday..." United Press International. 6 July 1981. Retrieved 29 October 2022.
  20. ^ "Als Oswalt Kolle mit Romy Schneider schlief" by Sven Michaelsen, Die Welt, 12 August 2008 (in German)
  21. ^ "Bruno Ganz erinnert sich an Affäre mit Romy Schneider", tz, 16 February 2019 (in German)
  22. ^ Ivana Sokola (17 June 2022). "Ein Mann, der Ambivalenzen liebte". Die Zeit (in German). Caption to image no. 5.
  23. ^ Maren Zimmermann (8 April 2021). "Romy Schneider: Wer waren die Männer, die ihr Leben geprägt haben?". AmoMama (in German).
  24. ^ "Stern "Wir haben abgetrieben!"" (in German). Lebendiges Museum Online [de]. Retrieved 28 May 2019.
  25. ^ a b "Romy Schneider a fini ses jours avec Laurent Pétin, son dernier amour" by Salomé Gegout, Le Journal des femmes [fr], 24 September 2020 (in French). Retrieved 8 September 2021.
  26. ^ Marjorie Raynaud (22 March 2022). "Romy Schneider amoureuse de Simone Signoret, les révélations de sa confidente". aufeminin (in French). Retrieved 25 September 2022.
  27. ^ a b Marie Desnos. "Romy Schneider ne s'est pas suicidée". Paris Match (in French). Paris. Retrieved 23 August 2021.
  28. ^ "Der frühe Tod von Romy Schneider", Die Welt, 29 May 2012 (in German)
  29. ^ "En France, à Boissy-sans-Avoir dans les Yvelines, Michel Piccoli, Jean-Loup Dabadie et Jean-Claude Brialy lors des obsèques de Romy Schneider le 2 juin 1982" (photo caption), by Rachel Henry, purepeople.com, 6 January 2021
  30. ^ Funeral of Romy Schneider on YouTube, Institut national de l'audiovisuel
  31. ^ Delon, Alain (11 June 1982). "Adieu ma puppelé". Paris Match (in French) (1724). from the original on 16 June 2010. Retrieved 24 August 2021.
  32. ^ "Neues Kursbuch" by Thomas Pröglhöf, 23 November 2002 (in German)
  33. ^ Question on notice, Bundesministerium für Verkehr, Innovation und Technologie, 31 October 2002 (in German)
  34. ^ Sander, Daniel (12 February 2008). "Ein Soap-Sternchen gibt den Weltstar". Der Spiegel (in German). Retrieved 14 February 2008.
  35. ^ "Ich hatte eine Gänsehaut". Süddeutsche Zeitung. 12 February 2008. Retrieved 26 March 2011.
  36. ^ "Catterfeld sagt Projekt ab", Focus, 27 July 2009 (in German)
  37. ^ Romy – Die Welt aus Gold 7 July 2009 at the Wayback Machine (in German)
  38. ^ Romy – the movie at Südwestrundfunk (in German)
  39. ^ "NDR Koproduktion hat Chance auf Goldenen Bären", Norddeutscher Rundfunk, 16 January 2018 (in German)
  40. ^ "Romy Schneider's 82nd birthday". Google. 23 September 2020.
  41. ^ "Romy und Alain: Die ewigen Verlobten".

Further reading

  • Tast, Hans-Jürgen (2008). Romy Schneider: ein Leben auf Titelseiten; [anlässlich des 70. Geburtstags der Schauspielerin Romy Schneider] [Romy Schneider: a life on front pages; [on the occasion of the 70th birthday of actress Romy Schneider]]. Kulleraugen (in German). Vol. 36. Schellerten: Kulleraugen-Medienschriften. p. 33. ISBN 978-3-88842-036-8.
  • Töteberg, Michael [de] (2009) Romy Schneider (in German). Rowohlt Verlag. ISBN 978-3-499-50669-7

External links

  • Romy Schneider at IMDb
  • Romy Schneider at the German Dubbing Card Index

romy, schneider, east, german, athlete, née, romy, müller, german, ˈʁoː, ˈʃnaɪ, listen, born, rosemarie, magdalena, albach, september, 1938, 1982, german, french, actress, began, career, german, heimatfilm, genre, early, 1950s, when, from, 1955, 1957, played, . For the East German athlete nee Romy Schneider see Romy Muller Romy Schneider German ˈʁoː mi ˈʃnaɪ dɐ listen born Rosemarie Magdalena Albach 23 September 1938 29 May 1982 was a German French 1 actress She began her career in the German Heimatfilm genre in the early 1950s when she was 15 From 1955 to 1957 she played the central character of Empress Elisabeth of Austria in the Austrian Sissi trilogy and later reprised the role in a more mature version in Luchino Visconti s Ludwig 1973 Schneider moved to France where she made successful and critically acclaimed films with some of the most notable film directors of that era Romy SchneiderSchneider in 1973BornRosemarie Magdalena Albach 1938 09 23 23 September 1938Vienna Nazi GermanyDied29 May 1982 1982 05 29 aged 43 Paris FranceBurial placeBoissy sans Avoir Yvelines FranceOther namesRomy Schneider AlbachOccupationActressYears active1953 1982Spouse s Harry Meyen m 1966 div 1975 wbr Daniel Biasini m 1975 div 1981 wbr Partner s Alain Delon 1958 1963 Laurent Petin fr 1981 1982 her death Children2 including Sarah BiasiniParent s Wolf Albach Retty father Magda Schneider mother RelativesRosa Albach Retty grandmother Contents 1 Early life 2 Early career 3 Later career 4 Personal life 5 Death 6 Enduring popularity 7 Filmography 8 Awards 8 1 Awards named after Romy Schneider 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life EditSchneider was born Rosemarie Magdalena Albach in Vienna six months after the Anschluss of Austria into Nazi Germany to actors Magda Schneider and Wolf Albach Retty Her paternal grandmother Rosa Albach Retty was also an actress Schneider s mother was German while her father was Austrian Four weeks after Romy s birth the parents brought her to Schonau am Konigssee in Germany where she and later her brother Wolf Dieter born 1941 grew up with their grandparents Franz Xaver and Maria Schneider on the country estate Mariengrund In her first year Romy was cared for by a governess Her parents were very rarely present due to their acting engagements In 1943 they separated and were divorced in 1945 2 3 In September 1944 Schneider was enrolled in the elementary school of Schonau and from July 1949 she attended the girls boarding school at Castle Goldenstein de a private secondary school of the Augustinian Canonesses of the Congregation of Notre Dame in Elsbethen near Salzburg Already during her schooldays she discovered her passion for acting which is why she was often on stage at theatrical performances at the residential school In her diary entry of 10 June 1952 she wrote If it were up to me I would immediately become an actress Every time I see a nice movie my first thoughts are about the idea I definitely have to become an actress Yes I have to 4 On 12 July 1953 she left the residential school Goldenstein with the degree of Mittlere Reife After the summer holidays she moved to Cologne to join her mother who lived there with the restaurateur and entrepreneur Hans Herbert Blatzheim de 5 After her parents divorce in 1945 Magda took charge of Romy and her brother Wolf Dieter eventually supervising the young girl s career often appearing alongside her daughter Her career was also overseen by her stepfather Blatzheim who Schneider indicated had an unhealthy interest in her 6 7 8 9 10 Early career Edit Schneider as Elisabeth of Austria in Sissi 1955 Romy Schneider s first film made when she was 15 was When the White Lilacs Bloom Again 1953 credited as Romy Schneider Albach In 1954 Schneider for the first time portrayed a royal playing a young Queen Victoria in the Austrian film Madchenjahre einer Konigin known in the U S as The Story of Vickie and in Britain as Victoria in Dover Schneider s breakthrough came with her portrayal of Empress Elisabeth of Austria in the romantic biopic Sissi 1955 and its two sequels Sissi The Young Empress 1956 and Sissi Fateful Years of an Empress 1957 all with Karlheinz Bohm who became a close friend Less stereotypical films during this busy period include The Girl and the Legend 1957 working with a young Horst Buchholz and Monpti 1957 directed by Helmut Kautner again with Buchholz Schneider on the set of What s New Pussycat 1965 Schneider soon starred in Christine 1958 a remake of Max Ophuls s 1933 film Liebelei in which her mother Magda Schneider had played the same role It was during the filming of Christine that Schneider fell in love with French actor Alain Delon who co starred in the movie She left Germany to join him in Paris and they announced their engagement in 1959 11 Schneider decided to live and to work in France slowly gaining the interest of film directors such as Orson Welles for The Trial 1962 based on Franz Kafka s The Trial She was also introduced to Luchino Visconti Under Visconti s direction she gave performances in the Theatre Moderne as Annabella and Delon as Giovanni in John Ford s stage play Tis Pity She s a Whore 1961 and in the film Boccaccio 70 segment The Job In 1962 Schneider played Anna in Sacha Pitoeff s production of Chekhov s play The Seagull also at the Theatre Moderne A brief stint in Hollywood included a starring role in Good Neighbor Sam 1964 a comedy with Jack Lemmon and What s New Pussycat 1965 in which Schneider co starred with Peter O Toole Peter Sellers and Woody Allen Schneider and German Chancellor Willy Brandt 1971 Schneider and Delon decided to separate in December 1963 although they remained close life long friends They continued to work together in such films as La Piscine The Swimming Pool 1968 and The Assassination of Trotsky 1972 Later career Edit Schneider during the filming of La califfa 1970 Schneider continued to work in France during the 1970s most notably with director Claude Sautet on five films Their first collaboration The Things of Life Les choses de la vie 1970 featuring Michel Piccoli made Schneider an icon in France The three collaborated again for the noir thriller Max et les ferrailleurs Max and the Junkmen 1971 and she appeared with Yves Montand in Sautet s Cesar et Rosalie 1972 Paris Match wrote 1971 Forty years after Greta and Marlene fifteen years after Marilyn the screen again has a great star 12 Schneider portrayed a more mature and realistic Elisabeth of Austria in Ludwig 1973 Visconti s film about the life of King Ludwig II of Bavaria Sissi sticks to me just like oatmeal Schneider once said 13 Other successes from this period included Le Train 1973 Claude Chabrol s thriller Innocents with Dirty Hands Les innocents aux mains sales 1975 with Rod Steiger and Le vieux fusil 1975 The gritty That Most Important Thing Love L important c est d aimer 1974 garnered her first Cesar Award France s equivalent of the Oscar a feat she repeated five years later in her last collaboration with Sautet for A Simple Story Une histoire simple 1978 On 30 October 1974 Schneider created one of the most memorable moments on German television She was the second guest on Dietmar Schonherr s talk show Je spater der Abend de The Later the Evening when she after a rather terse interview remarked passionately to the last guest bank robber and author Burkhard Driest Sie gefallen mir Sie gefallen mir sehr I like you I like you a lot 14 15 16 She also acted in The Infernal Trio 1974 with Michel Piccoli and in Garde a vue 1981 with Michel Serrault and Lino Ventura An unpleasant incident occurred during this period with leading German film director Rainer Werner Fassbinder who wanted to cast her as the lead in his film The Marriage of Maria Braun 1979 Negotiations broke down when he called Schneider a dumb cow 17 to which she responded by declaring she would never work with such a beast 18 Fassbinder cast Hanna Schygulla instead reviving his professional association with an actress to whom he had also been offensive 17 Schneider starred in Bertrand Tavernier s Death Watch La mort en direct 1980 playing a dying woman whose last days are watched on national television via a camera implanted in the brain of a journalist Harvey Keitel It is based on David G Compton s novel Schneider s last film was La Passante du Sans Souci The Passerby 1982 Personal life EditFollowing the end of her relationship with Delon Schneider married German director and actor Harry Meyen in July 1966 they later divorced The couple had a son David Christopher 1966 1981 In July 1981 David died at the age of 14 after attempting to climb the spiked fence at his stepfather s parents home and puncturing his femoral artery in the process 19 She had love affairs with Oswalt Kolle 1964 20 and actor Bruno Ganz early 1970s 21 She had a brief affair with Jean Louis Trintignant while filming The Train 1973 22 She also had in 1974 a brief affair with Jacques Dutronc while filming That Most Important Thing Love 23 Schneider appeared as one of 28 women under the banner We ve had abortions German Wir haben abgetrieben on the cover page of the West German magazine Stern on 6 June 1971 In that issue 374 women publicly stated that they had had pregnancies terminated which at that time was illegal 24 In 1975 Schneider married Daniel Biasini fr her private secretary they divorced in 1981 Their daughter Sarah is an actress Her last romantic partner was film producer Laurent Petin fr born 1949 25 In her 2018 biography Romy Schneider intime Alice Schwarzer revealed that Schneider confided to her that she had sexual relationships with women and was deeply in love with her close friend Simone Signoret 26 Death Edit Grave of Romy Schneider and her son in Boissy sans AvoirSchneider began drinking alcohol excessively after her son s death However Schneider s friend and sister of Laurent Petin Claude Petin said that she no longer drank at the time of her death 27 and that she is convinced it was a natural death 25 Schneider was found dead in her Paris apartment on 29 May 1982 The examining magistrate Laurent Davenas fr declared that she died from cardiac arrest 28 Claude Petin said that Schneider s cardiac arrest was due to a weakened heart caused by a kidney operation she had months before 27 Her tombstone at Boissy sans Avoir Yvelines bears her birth name Rosemarie Albach Funeral guests were Jean Claude Brialy Michel Piccoli Jean Loup Dabadie Jean Rochefort 29 30 Claude Sautet Claude Lelouch Gerard Depardieu her brother Wolf Dieter former husband Daniel Biasini and Laurent Petin citation needed Shortly afterwards Alain Delon arranged for her son David to be buried in the same grave 31 Enduring popularity EditThe French journalist Eugene Moineau initiated in 1984 the Prix Romy Schneider It is one of the most prestigious awards for upcoming actresses in the French film industry and is given by a jury each year in Paris in conjunction with the Prix Patrick Dewaere formerly the Prix Jean Gabin In 1990 the Austrian newspaper Kurier created the Romy TV Award in honour of Schneider In 2003 she was voted 78th on the list of the greatest Germans in the German TV program Unsere Besten the German version of 100 Greatest Britons the second highest ranked actress Marlene Dietrich was 50th on that list Until 2002 the Austrian Federal Railways InterCity service IC 535 from Wien Sudbahnhof to Graz was named Romy Schneider 32 33 A movie about Schneider s life titled Eine Frau wie Romy Une femme comme Romy A Woman Like Romy was planned by Warner Bros for 2009 Schneider s role was going to be played by Yvonne Catterfeld 34 35 The project was cancelled in July 2009 36 A musical about Schneider Romy Die Welt aus Gold Romy The Golden World was premiered in 2009 at the Theater Heilbronn 37 In November 2009 the ARD broadcast the feature film Romy de with Jessica Schwarz in the title role 38 The film 3 Days in Quiberon 2018 by Emily Atef describes a 1981 episode in Schneider s life in the French town of Quiberon 39 On 23 September 2020 Google celebrated her 82nd birthday with a Google Doodle in Germany France Austria Iceland and Ukraine 40 The culture broadcaster ARTE dedicated a documentary to Romy Schneider and Alain Delon Romy and Alain The Eternal Betrothed 2022 41 Filmography EditMain article Romy Schneider filmographyAwards EditBambi 1957 nominated for Sissi Bravo Otto 1957 Bronze 1958 Gold 1959 Silver 1971 Silver 1972 Bronze 1977 Bronze Etoile de Cristal fr 1963 as Best Foreign Actress for The Trial Golden Globe Award for Best Actress Motion Picture Drama 1963 nominated for The Cardinal Cesar Award for Best Actress 1975 won for L important c est d aimer 1976 nominated for Une femme a sa fenetre 1978 won for Une histoire simple 1979 nominated for Clair de femme 1982 nominated for La Passante du Sans Souci Deutscher Filmpreis Best Actress 1977 for Group Portrait with a Lady Premio David di Donatello 1979 Lifetime Achievement 2008 Honorary CesarAwards named after Romy Schneider Edit Prix Romy Schneider French film award established in 1984 Romy Austrian award established in 1990References Edit Isabelle Giordano Romy Schneider etait toutes les femmes a la fois by David Abiker Europe 1 7 October 2017 in French Wolfgang Jacobsen Schneider Romy in Neue Deutsche Biographie pp 306 308 307 in German Renate Seydel de fr Ich Romy Tagebuch eines Lebens p 27 Piper Munich 2005 ISBN 9783492228756 in German Die Konigin der Schmerzen by Matthias Matussek de and Lars Olav Beier Der Spiegel 21 May 2007 in German Romy Schneider by Dieter Wunderlich in German Biography in French pipole net Archived from the original on 30 October 2007 Retrieved 28 October 2007 Romy temoignant par la suite de l interet malsain qu il lui portait Biography and career in Dutch SeniorPlaza nl Retrieved 28 October 2007 waarvan Romy later aangaf dat hij een ongezonde belangstelling voor haar had Surkus Andrea Auch das noch Alice Schwarzer entdeckt Romy Schneider als Frauensymbol Suddeutsche Zeitung in German Archived from the original on 4 November 2007 Retrieved 28 October 2007 und will mit ihr schlafen Gretter Susanne Biography in German and French FemBio Frauen Biographieforschung e V Retrieved 28 October 2007 Il a clairement propose de coucher avec moi Leinkauf Thomas 19 September 1998 Der Liebling der Machos Berliner Zeitung in German Archived from the original on 19 January 2008 Retrieved 28 October 2007 Blatzheim in ihrer Jugend mit ihr schlafen wollte Nick Rees Roberts Darren Waldron eds 2015 Alain Delon Style Stardom and Masculinity Bloomsbury USA p 52 ISBN 9781623564452 Alice Schwarzer 2018 Romy Schneider intime in French L Archipel p 104 ISBN 9782809824988 Translation of Romy Schneider Mythos und Leben Kiepenheuer amp Witsch 2008 Romy Schneider Bilder einer Ikone wieninternational at in German Archived from the original on 21 November 2007 Retrieved 19 December 2007 Sissi pappt an mir wie Griesbrei Und retten kann uns nur Heinz Schenk Stern in German 9 August 2007 Retrieved 26 March 2011 Beier Lars Olav 23 May 2007 Die Beruhrbare Der Spiegel in German Retrieved 14 February 2008 Je spater der Abend Burkhard Driest and Romy Schneider on YouTube October 1974 29 seconds in German a b Malcolm Derek 28 January 1999 Rainer Werner Fassbinder The Marriage of Maria Braun The Guardian Retrieved 22 May 2020 Anderson Jason 26 October 2016 Nothing Left to Lose Toronto International Film Festival Retrieved 22 May 2020 The son of actress Romy Schneider was killed Sunday United Press International 6 July 1981 Retrieved 29 October 2022 Als Oswalt Kolle mit Romy Schneider schlief by Sven Michaelsen Die Welt 12 August 2008 in German Bruno Ganz erinnert sich an Affare mit Romy Schneider tz 16 February 2019 in German Ivana Sokola 17 June 2022 Ein Mann der Ambivalenzen liebte Die Zeit in German Caption to image no 5 Maren Zimmermann 8 April 2021 Romy Schneider Wer waren die Manner die ihr Leben gepragt haben AmoMama in German Stern Wir haben abgetrieben in German Lebendiges Museum Online de Retrieved 28 May 2019 a b Romy Schneider a fini ses jours avec Laurent Petin son dernier amour by Salome Gegout Le Journal des femmes fr 24 September 2020 in French Retrieved 8 September 2021 Marjorie Raynaud 22 March 2022 Romy Schneider amoureuse de Simone Signoret les revelations de sa confidente aufeminin in French Retrieved 25 September 2022 a b Marie Desnos Romy Schneider ne s est pas suicidee Paris Match in French Paris Retrieved 23 August 2021 Der fruhe Tod von Romy Schneider Die Welt 29 May 2012 in German En France a Boissy sans Avoir dans les Yvelines Michel Piccoli Jean Loup Dabadie et Jean Claude Brialy lors des obseques de Romy Schneider le 2 juin 1982 photo caption by Rachel Henry purepeople com 6 January 2021 Funeral of Romy Schneider on YouTube Institut national de l audiovisuel Delon Alain 11 June 1982 Adieu ma puppele Paris Match in French 1724 Archived from the original on 16 June 2010 Retrieved 24 August 2021 Neues Kursbuch by Thomas Proglhof 23 November 2002 in German Question on notice Bundesministerium fur Verkehr Innovation und Technologie 31 October 2002 in German Sander Daniel 12 February 2008 Ein Soap Sternchen gibt den Weltstar Der Spiegel in German Retrieved 14 February 2008 Ich hatte eine Gansehaut Suddeutsche Zeitung 12 February 2008 Retrieved 26 March 2011 Catterfeld sagt Projekt ab Focus 27 July 2009 in German Romy Die Welt aus Gold Archived 7 July 2009 at the Wayback Machine in German Romy the movie at Sudwestrundfunk in German NDR Koproduktion hat Chance auf Goldenen Baren Norddeutscher Rundfunk 16 January 2018 in German Romy Schneider s 82nd birthday Google 23 September 2020 Romy und Alain Die ewigen Verlobten Further reading EditTast Hans Jurgen 2008 Romy Schneider ein Leben auf Titelseiten anlasslich des 70 Geburtstags der Schauspielerin Romy Schneider Romy Schneider a life on front pages on the occasion of the 70th birthday of actress Romy Schneider Kulleraugen in German Vol 36 Schellerten Kulleraugen Medienschriften p 33 ISBN 978 3 88842 036 8 Toteberg Michael de 2009 Romy Schneider in German Rowohlt Verlag ISBN 978 3 499 50669 7External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Romy Schneider Romy Schneider at IMDb Romy Schneider at the German Dubbing Card Index Portal Biography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Romy Schneider amp oldid 1127176542, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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