Jean-Marc Barr
Jean-Marc Barr | |
---|---|
Born |
Bitburg, West Germany | 27 September 1960
Occupation | Film, stage, television actor, director, screenwriter, film producer |
Jean-Marc Barr (born 27 September 1960) is a French American film actor and director.
Career
Barr was born to a French mother and an American father working in the US Armed Forces. He is fluent in both French and English. Barr was born in West Germany where his father was stationed, and lived an itinerant childhood. His family moved to France in 1968, then to California in 1974.[1][2]
Barr's parents wished him to join the armed forces but he was unwilling to follow in his father's footsteps. He studied philosophy at the University of California, Los Angeles, the Paris Conservatoire and the Sorbonne. He moved to London to pursue an education in drama at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama,.[3][4]
Barr began working in theatre in France in 1986. After finding work in television (including a small role in Hotel du Lac (1986), the BBC's version of the Booker prize-winning novel by Anita Brookner), and film, (in particular Hope and Glory (1987) by John Boorman), he was cast in the tremendously successful The Big Blue (1988). Luc Besson cast him in the role of French diver Jacques Mayol, alongside Rosanna Arquette and Jean Reno. The Big Blue was the most financially successful film in France in the 1980s.
In 1991, he starred in Danish director Lars von Trier's Europa, marking the beginning of a long friendship (he is the godfather of von Trier's children) as well as a significant professional relationship. He went on to appear in von Trier’s Breaking the Waves (1996), Dancer in the Dark (2000), Dogville (2004), Manderlay (2005), The Boss of It All (2006) and Nympho()maniac (2013). In 2005 he starred in the French film Crustacés et Coquillages. In 1999 he starred in the French cinéma du corps/cinema of the body drama film, Don't Let Me Die on a Sunday (French: J'aimerais pas crever un dimanche), directed by Didier Le Pêcheur.
His collaboration with von Trier put him on track to start directing his own work. He debuted in 1999 as a director, screenwriter and producer with the intimate love story Lovers. The film became the first part of a trilogy; the films that followed were the drama Too Much Flesh (2000) and the comedy Being Light (2001), which he co-directed with Pascal Arnold. Barr and Pascal also directed the 2006 film Chacun sa nuit (eng: One to another) and discovered at that time Lizzie Brocher, Arthur Dupont and Karl E. Landler. Then an other one in 2012, Sexual Chronicles of a French Family.[5]
In 1997 he appeared in The Scarlet Tunic, produced by Zigi Kamasa.
He appeared as Hugo in The Red Siren in 2002 and played divorce lawyer Maitre Bertram in the 2003 Merchant Ivory film le Divorce. He appeared as the main character in the video for Blur's 1995 single, "Charmless Man".[6]
He played author Jack Kerouac in the 2013 film adaptation of the Beat Generation autobiographical novel Big Sur.[7]
References
- ↑ Jean-Marc Barr at franceinter.fr
- ↑ An Interview with the Fabulous Jean-Marc Barr, Beachcomber, 16 January 2014
- ↑ Jean-Marc Barr at franceinter.fr
- ↑ An Interview with the Fabulous Jean-Marc Barr, Beachcomber, 16 January 2014
- ↑ "Sexual Chronicles of a French Family (Chroniques sexuelles d'une famille d'aujourd'hui)". mubi.com. MUBI. Retrieved 1 July 2012.
- ↑ YouTube – the charmless man-blur
- ↑
External links
- Jean-Marc Barr at the Internet Movie Database
- Jean-Marc Barr at AllMovie
- Jean-Marc Barr discography at Discogs
- (French) Biography at zoom-cinema.fr
- Photos Jean-Marc Barr, Berlin 2001