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Diane Kurys
Born (1948-12-03) 3 December 1948 (age 75)
Lyon, Rhône, France
Occupation Film director, actress, screenwriter, producer
Years active 1966–present
Spouse(s) Alexandre Arcady
Children Sacha Sperling

Diane Kurys (French: [djan kyʁis]; born 3 December 1948) is a French director, producer, filmmaker and actress. Several of her films as director are semi-autobiographical.

Personal life

Kurys was born in Lyon, Rhône, France, the younger of two daughters. She is a daughter of Russian and Polish Jewish immigrants, Lena and Michel. Diane Kurys and her older sister spent their early years in Lyon. Like many of her film's characters, she had a difficult relationship with her parents, and her traumatic childhood became a subject in many of her films. Their parents met and got married at Camp de Rivesaltes in 1942, separating in 1954. Their divorce deeply marked and affected Diane, and would become a real source of inspiration for several of her films; Kurys stated that she made films about them because she “wanted to see them back together again.” It was after this event that her mom decided to move with her two daughters to Paris, where she ran a woman’s fashion boutique, while her dad stayed in Lyon where he ran a men's clothing store. She lived with her mother after their divorce in 1954, at one point running away to join her father at age sixteen.

In her adolescence, she was radicalized in the spirit of May of '68, but became somewhat disillusioned in the aftermath, calling it a "revolution bourgeois" in an interview with Jean-Luc Wachthausen. She first met her partner and fellow filmmaker Alexandre Arcady when she was fifteen years old, in 1964, and went to live in Israel in a kibbutz near the Lebanese border. They have been a couple since the 1960s and have two production companies together. Their son Yasha, born in 1991, is an author writing under the name Sacha Sperling.

Acting career

As a student at the Jules Ferry high school, she studied modern literature at the Sorbonne before becoming a teacher and then a theatre actress in the 1970s, joining the Madeleine Renaud: Jean-Louis Barrault's company with Antoine Bourseiller and Ariane Mnouchkine at La Cartoucherie or Cafe de la Gare.

After the student revolt in May 1967, Kurys left University and along with Arcady began her involvement in theatre; initially, with Kurys as an actor, and Alexandre as both an actor and director. She acted in theatre, film, and television for eight years. Kurys mentions how she loved the environment of acting but she was not happy doing it as she couldn’t express herself and was often seen as rebellious. She felt unable to express herself under "the director or any kind of authority or control." This led to her transitioning into writing and film making.

Directorial career

In 1975, she worked with Philippe Adrien to adapt Lanford Wilson's play The Hot l Baltimore for French television, under the title Hôtel Baltimore, which she had previously performed at the Espace Cardin. The following year, she began writing an autobiographical novel, Diabolo menthe, which, with the aid of a government grant, she adapted into the screenplay for her directorial debut Peppermint Soda (1977). Set in 1963, it follows a girl named Anne losing her childhood innocence, exploring her life as a child of divorced parents and her relationship with her sister; Kurys dedicated the film to her real-life sister. In an interview, Kurys said her inspiration came "from myself, my own life, my own experience". The film was a critical and commercial success.

Kurys' next film, Cocktail Molotov, was released in 1980. Starring François Cluzet, Élise Caron and Philippe Lebas, the film portrayed the May 1968 Paris student movement through the point of view of three children: Anne, Frank, and Bruno. Though not a direct sequel, the film is considered a companion piece to Peppermint Soda, and was not as well-received.

Kurys again explored divorce in Entre Nous (Coup de foudre, 1983), this time from the maternal point of view, with Isabelle Huppert playing a mother who leaves her husband (Guy Marchand) and goes to Paris with her friend (Miou-Miou) and their children. The film, inspired by Kurys' own family history, honored the emotional manners and conventions of the nineteen-forties and -fifties, whilst depicting a feminist relationship atypical of the time. Kurys said that the film was her way "to allow them to live together once more - by putting them on screen together," as, in real life, her parents never saw each other again after the events depected in the film. The film was extremely well-received, winning the FIPRESCI Prize at the San Sebastián Film Festival, and garnering several major awards nominations, including Best Film at the 9th César Awards and Best Foreign Language Film at the 56th Academy Awards.

Kurys opened the 40th edition of the Cannes Film Festival with A Man in Love (Une homme amoureux, 1987), her English-language debut. It follows an American film star (Peter Coyote) and an unknown British actress (Greta Scacchi) who meet on the set of a period drama in Rome. At the film's conclusion, Scacchi's character gives up acting to become a writer, echoing Kurys's own transition in life, though the film was her first to largely eschew autobiography, as well as her first contemporaneous film.

Kurys returned to autobiographical filmmaking with C'est la vie (La Baule-les-Pins, 1990), which featured a teenaged protagonist in the nineteen-fifties whose parents, played by Nathalie Baye and Richard Berry, are on the cusp of divorce. ..... Kurys followed C'est la vie with the comedy Love After Love (Après l'amour, 1992) about a frustrated novelist, played by Isabelle Huppert, juggling affairs with two men, and Six Days, Six Nights (À la folie, 1994) which examined the relationship between two adult sisters, portrayed by Anne Parillaud and Béatrice Dalle, after the death of their mother. Both films were inspired by Kurys' observations of life in 1990s Paris.

Kurys next directed the period film Children of the Century (Les Enfants du siècle, 1999) a biographical drama based on the tumultuous love affair between two French literary icons of the 19th century, novelist George Sand (Juliette Binoche) and poet Alfred de Musset (Benoît Magimel). Kurys wished to move away from the autobiographical films that typified her career; she was drawn to the maturity of the characters and the untold nature of the story. Production often filmed in the actual locations once visited by Sand and Musset, Sand's jewellery was loaned to Binoche by the writer's estate. An exhibition on the film was held at the Museum of Romantic Life in 1999. The film was ultimately met with a mixed reception.

Her ninth film was released in 2003: Je reste! with Sophie Marceau, Charles Berling and Vincent Pérez. The Anniversary (fr. L'anniversaire) was released in 2005. It features Lambert Wilson, Pierre Palmade, Jean-Hugues Anglade, Antoine Duléry, Michèle Laroque, Zoé Félix, Philippe Bas. Four years later, in 2008, the biopic about Françoise Sagan called Sagan was released. Starring Sylvie Testud, Denis Podalydès, Pierre Palmade, Jeanne Balibar, Guillaume Gallienne, and Arielle Dombasle.

Her film Pour une femme, released in 2013, was shot in Lyon during the summer of 2012 with stars Benoît Magimel, Mélanie Thierry and Nicolas Duvauchelle. The film is about an affair from the point of view of the husband, inspired in part by her parents' messy marriage and divorce, and is a companion piece to her earlier film Entre Nous, which was from mother's point of view. The film won in CoLCoA French Film Festival in 2014.

In 2016, she produced and directed her thirteenth film, Arrête ton cinéma!, adapted from Sylvie Testud's book C'est le métier qui rentre, a comedy following a famous actress weighing an extravagant offer to make a film. The cast includes Josiane Balasko, Zabou Breitman, and Sylvie Testud.

Her 2018 film Ma mère est folle, starring Fanny Ardant, Vianney, Patrick Chesnais and Arielle Dombasle, was written by Pietro Caracciolo and Kurys' son Sacha Sperling. It portrays the uneasy reunion of a mother and son while on a trip to Rotterdam.

Production companies

Alexandre Films was formed in 1977 with Alexandre Arcady before the release of Peppermint Soda. The company co-produced her first six films as well as a number of Arcady's, whose name it bears. The pair formed New Light Films in 1994, which produces films in both French and English.

Selected filmography

Director

Year Title Notes
1977 Peppermint Soda (Diabolo menthe) also screenwriter and co-producer
1980 Cocktail Molotov also co-screenwriter, co-adapter, and co-dialogist
1983 Entre Nous a.k.a. Coup de foudre also screenwriter, co-adapter, and dialogist
nominated for Best Foreign Language Film at the 56th Academy Awards
1987 A Man in Love (Un Homme Amoreux) also co-screenwriter, co-dialogist, and co-producer
1990 C'est la vie (La Baule-les-Pins) also co-screenwriter, co-dialogist, and co-producer
1992 Love After Love (Apres l'amour) also co-screenwriter, co-dialogist, and co-producer
1994 À la folie aka Six Days, Six Nights also co-screenwriter, co-dialogist
1999 The Children of the Century aka Les Enfants du siècle also co-screenwriter, co-dialogist, and co-producer
2003 I'm Staying! a.k.a. Je Reste! also co-screenwriter, co-dialogist
2005 L'anniversaire also co-screenwriter, co-dialogist, and co-producer
2008 Sagan also screenwriter, dialogist, and co-producer
2013 Pour une femme also screenwriter
2016 Arrête ton cinéma
2018 My Mother is Crazy (Ma Mere est Folle)

Actress

Year Title Role Notes
1972 Les petits enfants d'Attila Herself directed by Jean-Pierre Bastid fr
Le bar de la fourche Christie directed by Alain Levent
What a Flash! Annie directed by Jean-Michel Barjol fr
1973 Elle court, elle court la banlieue Friend of Jean-Paul directed by Gérard Pirès
Poil de carotte Agathe directed by Henri Garziani fr
1974 Les Grands Détectives (TV series) fr the pretty blonde "Rendez-vous dans les ténèbres" directed by Jean Vautrin
1975 Les Brigades du Tigre (TV series) fr Catherine "Le défi" Season 2, episode 4
Messieurs les Jurés (TV series) fr Sylvie Radet "L'affaire Lambert"
Le Père Amable Phémie TV movie based on short story by Guy de Maupassant
La Mémoire The girl short film directed by Gébé fr as Georges Blondeaux
1976 F comme Fairbanks Annick directed by Maurice Dugowson
Hôtel Baltimore The girl TV movie directed by Alexandre Arcady

Lanford Wilson's play adapted by Kurys and Philippe Adrien

Fellini's Casanova Madame Charpillon directed by Federico Fellini
1977 Commissaire Moulin de Klaus Biedermann (TV series) fr directed by Jacques Trébouta
Les Cinq Dernières Minutes Fr Julienne directed by Guy Lessertisseur

Literature

  • Carrie Tarr: Diane Kurys. Manchester University Press, New York, 1999, ISBN: 978-0719050954

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Diane Kurys para niños

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