Portrait of Claude Berri

Claude Berri

Production

Biography

Claude Berri (1 July 1934 – 12 January 2009) was a French film director, producer, screenwriter, distributor and actor. Berri was a leading figure of the French film industry both a director and as a producer. Following a short film that won an Academy Award, Berri achieved success with his first feature film, The Two of Us (1967). He then had a varied career, producing and distributing both mainstream and avant-garde films. During the 1970s, Berri's films as a director were mostly comedies but he later found increased success with several high-profile literary adaptations. In 1986, his two-part film Jean de Florette and Manon of the Spring won public and critical acclaim, becoming his best-known work. He next directed Uranus (1990) and most notably Germinal (1993). In 1997, he directed the historical biopic Lucie Aubrac. Directors whose films were produced by Berri include Roman Polanski, Jacques Demy, Jean-Jacques Annaud, Claude Sautet, Miloš Forman, Claude Zidi, Jacques Rivette, Patrice Chéreau, Alain Chabat, Abdellatif Kechiche and Dany Boon. Born Claude Beri Langmann in Paris, Berri was the son of Jewish immigrant parents. His mother, Beila (née Bercu), was from Romania, and his father, Hirsch Langmann, was a furrier from Poland. In 1943, during the Nazi occupation of France, Berri's parents entrusted him for his safety to a family in the countryside. He spent the rest of the occupation being fostered by "an antisemitic couple" who were unaware that he was Jewish. His sister, screenwriter and editor Arlette Langmann, was born after the war. Berri's original vocation was to be an actor. He began a career in the early 1950s but struggled to find roles, which prompted him to turn to directing and eventually producing. In 1965, he gained notice for The Chicken, which won the Award for best short film at the 38th Academy Awards. In 1967, Berri directed The Two of Us (Le Vieil homme et l'enfant), a partially autobiographical film that told the story of a Jewish child, entrusted during World War II to a benevolent and antisemitic old farmer who remains unaware that the boy he is caring for is a Jew. The film was a great success in France and abroad. Berri also adapted the story into a novel, released the same year as the film. During the years that followed, Berri became active as a producer and film distributor while continuing to direct his own films. Also in 1967, with his associate (later brother-in-law) Jean-Pierre Rassam, Berri bought the international distribution rights for Miloš Forman's The Firemen's Ball which was a great success and was nominated to the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film. Berri's company, Renn Productions, which he had founded to produce The Two of Us, gradually became a major player in the French film industry. ... Source: Article "Claude Berri" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA.

Born: July 1, 1934

Place of Birth: Paris, France

Known For

Filmography

2004
2004
Happily Ever After

as le père de Vincent

2003
The Car Keys

as Self / Self - Un producteur

2002
Asterix & Obelix: Mission Cleopatra

as Portrait painter of Cléopâtre

2001
1999
Hard Off

as Claude Langmann

1998
Un grand cri d'amour

as André Maillard

1997
Didier

as Type aéroport

1995
The Three Brothers

as Le Président du tribunal

1994
The Machine

as Hugues

1993
Germinal

as Narrator (voice) (uncredited)

1990
Les Nuls, l'émission

as Self - Guest

1990
Stan the Flasher

as Stan Goldberg

1987
1983
1981
Le Roi des cons

as L'agent de police

1975
1975
1974
1972
Sex Shop

as Claude

1971
1971
Le Cinema de Papa

as Claude Langmann adulte

1970
The Man with Connections

as Military doctor (uncredited)

1968
1966
Line of Demarcation

as Chef de famille juif

1965
The Sleeping Car Murders

as Un porteur à la gare de Lyon (uncredited)

1962
Greed

as André (uncredited)

1962
The Seven Deadly Sins

as André (segment "L'avarice'") (uncredited)

1962
Janine

as Claude

1961
1961
1960
The Truth

as Georges

1960
Zazie dans le Métro

as Waiter (uncredited)

1960
Les Bonnes Femmes

as André, young soldier

1959
Asphalt

as Band Boy (uncredited)

1958
Dangerous Games

as Young man

1955
French Cancan

as Un jeune homme à l'inauguration (uncredited)

1953
Good Lord Without Confession

as Le fils d'Eugène

1953
Rue de l'estrapade

as (uncredited)