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Marcel Pagnol

 

Pagnol, Marcel (1895-1974). Dramatist, filmmaker, and novelist. Born in Aubagne (Bouches-du-Rhône), he achieved fame for his evocations of the Midi and the manners of its people. He studied English at the University of Aix-en-Provence, and founded the literary review Fortunio, which later became Les Cahiers du sud. After various teaching posts he was appointed to the Lycée Condorcet. He had already written plays and theatre criticism; in Paris he pursued his theatrical career with plays of sharp social observation, notably Topaze (1928). His Marseille trilogy, Marius (1929), Fanny (1931), and César (1936), demonstrated his mastery of characterization in tragicomic vein. In the 1930s, with the arrival of talking films, he came to regard the cinema as an even more effective medium than the theatre. After working on film versions of existing material, including open-air filming of Giono's Jofroi (1933), and Angèle (1934) with Fernandel, he produced Merlusse (1935), his first original screenplay. Later successes included Regain (1937) and La Femme du boulanger (1938).

Pagnol's reputation as a dramatist and cinéaste was such that, after the war, which he had spent in Provence, he was elected to the Académie Française (1946), the first film-maker to be honoured in this way. However, with his light-hearted satire, use of regional vocabulary, and association with the new genre of the cinema, he was not always regarded as a ‘serious’ writer. Mindful of this, he published his Notes sur le rire (1947) and La Critique des critiques (1949), and translations into French of Shakespeare's Hamlet (1947) and A Midsummer Night's Dream (1970), and Virgil's Bucolics (1958). In addition to films, such as his adaptations from Alphonse Daudet's Lettres de mon moulin (1953-4, 1967), he later turned to prose writing with his Souvenirs d'enfance, consisting of La Gloire de mon père and Le Château de ma mère (1957) and the posthumous Le Temps des amours (1977), and with his tragicomic celebration of the myth of water, L'Eau des collines (1963), a prose-fiction version of his over-long film Manon des sources (1952). This novel was, in turn, re-adapted for the screen by Claude Berri, as Jean de Florette and Manon des sources (1986), to wide popular acclaim. During his lifetime Pagnol's reputation waxed and waned; since his death the quality of his writing has been increasingly respected, and his reputation has benefited from the enhanced prestige of film as an art-form.

[Bernard Swift]

Bibliography

  • C. E. J. Caldicott, Marcel Pagnol (1977)
  • G. Berni, Merveilleux Pagnol (1981)
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Columbia Encyclopedia: Marcel Pagnol
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Pagnol, Marcel (märsĕl' pänyôl'), 1895-1974, French dramatist and film director. Pagnol gained recognition for his trilogy of sentimental comedies set on the Marseilles waterfront-Marius (1929), Fanny (1931), and César (1936)-for which he wrote the screenplays (1931, 1932, 1934). He used César for his directorial debut. Other films include The Well-Digger's Daughter (1940) and Letters from My Windmill (1955). Merlusse (1935, tr. 1937) embodies Pagnol's theories of the film art. His other works include the plays Judas (1956) and Angèle (1970). In 1986, the two-part film Jean de Florette and Manon des Sources, based on Pagnol's novel The Water of the Hills (1962), met great success. His reminiscences form the basis of two critically acclaimed 1991 films, My Father's Glory and My Mother's Castle.

Bibliography

See his memoir, The Days Were Too Short (tr. 1960).

Quotes By: Marcel Pagnol
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Quotes:

"My advice is to look out for engineers. They begin with sewing machines and end up with nuclear bombs."

Director: Marcel Pagnol
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  • Born: Feb 28, 1895 in Aubagne, France
  • Died: Apr 28, 1974
  • Occupation: Director, Writer
  • Active: '30s-'50s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Comedy
  • Career Highlights: Jean de Florette, Manon of the Spring, La Fille Du Puisatier
  • First Major Screen Credit: Marius (1931)

Biography

French filmmaker Marcel Pagnol began his career as an English teacher in the Marseilles region; in his free time he continued, as he had done since he was 15, to write plays. In 1922, he began teaching in Paris. While he'd had several of his plays produced in Marseilles, he was pleased and surprised to discover that Parisian theaters were also interested in his work; he soon abandoned teaching to become a full-time playwright. During the late '20s when his career was at its peak with plays such as Topaze and Marius, Pagnol decided to make 'talkies', and founded his own studio. As he regarded films as useful medium only for recording stage plays and making them available to a wider audience, Pagnol's films were straightforward chronicles of stage plays. Because he only recorded the best of the best from Southern France, his work was popular. In addition to directing and playwrighting, Pagnol also wrote screenplays for film adaptations of his plays for other directors such as Alexander Korda. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Marcel Pagnol
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Marcel Pagnol (February 28, 1895April 18, 1974) was a French novelist, playwright, and filmmaker. In 1946, he became the first filmmaker elected to the Académie Française.

Contents

Biography

Born February 28, 1895 in Aubagne, Bouches-du-Rhône département, in southern France near Marseille, the eldest son of school teacher Joseph Pagnol and seamstress Augustine Lansot, Marcel Pagnol grew up in Marseille with his younger brothers Paul, René, and younger sister Germaine.

School years

He learned how to read at a young age to his father's amazement but his mother did not allow him to touch a book until he was six "for fear of cerebral explosion". During this time he spent many summers with his family in a house, the Bastide Neuve, in the sleepy Provençal village of La Treille in the hills between Aubagne and Marseille.

He was only 15 years old when his mother died on 16 June 1910 at the age of 36 years. His father remarried in 1912.

In 1913 at the age of 18 he passed his bac in philosophy and started studying literature at the University in Aix-en-Provence. When the First World War broke out he was mobilised in the infantry at Nice but in January 1915 he was declared unfit for military service due to his feeble constitution.

On 2 March 1916, he married Simone Colin in Marseille, to the displeasure of his father.[1]. In November of the same year he passed his licence in English and became an English teacher. He taught in various local colleges and was promoted to work in the lycee in Marseille.

Paris : teacher and playwright

He relocated to Paris where he taught English until 1927, when he decided instead to devote his life to playwriting. From the time that he moved to the capital he joined a group of young writers. In collaboration with one of these friends, Paul Nivoix, he wrote the play, Merchants of Glory, which was produced in 1924.

He wrote Topaze in 1928 a satire based on ambition.

Exiled in Paris he began to think with nostalgia of his roots. Taking this as his setting, in 1929 he wrote Marius.

This would later be turned into Pagnol's first film in 1931.

Separated from Simone Collin since 1926, he met the young English dancer Kitty Murphy. Together they had Jacques Pagnol in 1930, who became his assistant after the war and subsequently a cameraman for France 3 Marseille.

Filmmaking

The year 1926 was decisive for his career; he was present at the projection, in London of one of the first talking films and he was so overwhelmed that he decided to devote his efforts to cinema of this kind. Straightaway he contacted Paramount Picture studios and suggested an adaptation of his play Marius. This was directed by Alexander Korda. It came out on 10 October 1931 and was one of the first successful talking films in the french language.

In 1932 Marcel Pagnol founded his own film production studios in the countryside near Marseille. Over the next decade Pagnol produced his own films. He himself took on many different roles in the production : financier, director, script writer, head of the studios and translator of foreign scripts. These films employed the greatest french actors of that time.

Marcel Pagnol was elected a member of the Académie Française in 1946.

He was the first film maker ever to receive this honour.

The birth of a novelist

In 1949 his second daughter from his second marriage died at the age of 2. He was so devastated that he fled the south and returned to live in Paris. He went back to writing plays, but after his next piece was badly received he decided to change his job once more and began writing a novel based on his childhood experiences. In 1957 La Gloire de mon père was published to instant acclaim. For five years he continued to write on the same theme producing in succession Le château de ma mère, Le Temps des Secrets and L'Eau des collines which comprised Jean de Florette and Manon des Sources.

He died in Paris on April 18, 1974. He is buried in the municipal cemetery at La Treille, along with his mother and father, brothers, and wife. His boyhood friend, David Magnan (Lili des Bellons in the autographies), died at the Second Battle of the Marne in July 1918 and is buried nearby.

Pagnol adapted his own film Manon des Sources, which starred his wife in the titular role, into two novels, Jean de Florette and Manon des Sources, collectively titled L'Eau des Collines. In the 1980s, both books were adapted back into film by film-maker Claude Berri, to international acclaim. Pagnol's affectionate reminiscences of childhood, La Gloire de mon père and Le château de ma mère were also filmed successfully by Yves Robert in 1990.

Awards

  • 1939: Best foreign film for HARVEST - New-York Critic's Circle Awards
  • 1940: Best foreign film for THE BAKER'S WIFE - New-York Critic's Circle Awards
  • 1950: Best foreign film for JOFROI - New-York Critic's Circle Awards

Bibliography

Filmography, as director

References

External links

Preceded by
Maurice Donnay
Seat 25
Académie française

1946–74
Succeeded by
Jean Bernard

 
 

 

Copyrights:

French Literature Companion. The New Oxford Companion to Literature in French. Copyright © 1995, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Quotes By. Copyright © 2008 QuotationsBook.com. All rights reserved.  Read more
Director. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Marcel Pagnol" Read more

 

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