Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Fanny Ardant: Armenian roots are family matters, not journalists biz

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Fanny Ardant: Armenian roots are family matters, not journalists biz

    Fanny Ardant: Armenian roots are family matters, not journalists business

    July 10, 2011 - 15:54 AMT


    PanARMENIAN.Net - `My Armenian roots are family matters, and not
    journalists' business,' said world known French actress Fanny Ardant
    when commenting on her Armenian origin during the meeting with
    journalists in Yerevan.

    Ardant is currently in Armenia for participation in the Golden Apricot
    eighth international film festival. Her films Ashes and Blood (2009)
    and Departed Dreams (2010) are to be shown soon.

    The actress said that she began directing films when wrote scenarios.

    `When I wrote scenarios I had all material in my imagination.
    Direction was continuation of my scenarist work,' Ardant said.

    Fanny Ardant was born on March 22, 1949 in Saumur, Maine-et-Loire,
    France. The daughter of a cavalry officer in the French army, Fanny
    later moved to Monaco with her family where she grew up. Her father
    was a friend of the Royal household who was also a governor at the
    palace. She often visited the palace and made acquaintance with
    Princess Grace

    At the age of 17, Fanny moved to Aix-en-Provence where she attended
    university majoring in political science. She later studied drama and
    made her stage début in Corneille's Polyeucte in 1974. Her first big
    break came in 1979 when she landed a role on the TV drama Les Dames de
    la côte (The Ladies of the Coast). Her appearance on the series caught
    the attention of the celebrated director François Truffaut, who
    offered her a role in his next film La Femme d'à côté (The Woman Next
    Door) in 1981, starring opposite Gérard Depardieu.

    It was a role that changed her life both professionally and
    personally. Her performance in the film brought her international
    recognition and her first César nomination for best actress in 1982.
    On the personal front, she became Truffaut's companion and remained
    with him until his death in 1984. They had a daughter, Joséphine, who
    was born the previous year. Fanny starred in Truffaut's last film
    Vivement dimanche! (Confidentially Yours), and received her second
    César nomination for best actress.

    Throughout the 80's and 90's, Fanny continued to give strong
    performances, cementing her reputation with serious and dramatic
    roles. In 1994, she teamed up once again with Gérard Depardieu in Le
    Colonel Chabert, playing the role of a complex widow.

    In 2004, Fanny appeared alongside Gérard Depardieu in the stage
    adaptation of Henry James' novel The Beast In The Jungle (La Bête Dans
    La Jungle), which had been adapted into French by Marguerite Duras.
    The play attracted an international audience to the Thétre de la
    Madeleine in Paris.

    Fluent in French, English, Italian and Spanish, Fanny occasionally
    ventured outside of French cinema and worked in such productions as La
    Famiglia (The Family) and Le Cena for Italian director Ettore Scola,
    the Italian version of Chekov's Three Sisters (Paura e amore), and the
    provocative film version of L'odore del sangue. She was also seen in a
    small supporting role in the 1995 Sydney Pollack's film Sabrina. And
    in 1998, she appeared in the Oscar-nominated drama Elizabeth, in which
    her presence highlighted the small but important role of the ruthless
    and deliciously flirtatious Mary of Guise.

    Fanny Ardant resides in Paris, France. She has three daughters, Lumir,
    Joséphine and Baladine.

Working...
X