Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

French film titan starred in ‘A Man and a Woman’

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PARIS — French film legend and amateur race car driver Jean-Louis Trintignan­t, who earned acclaim for his starring role in the Oscar-winning film “A Man and a Woman” half a century ago and went on to portray the brutality of aging in his later years, has died. He was 91.

Mr. Trintignan­t died in his home in southern France, according to Bertrand Cortellini, who operated a vineyard with the actor and visited him Thursday before his death.

He did not divulge details. French news reports said Mr. Trintignan­t had prostate cancer.

In a career that started when he was 19, Mr. Trintignan­t appeared in more than 100 films. He was one of France’s premier actors in the post-war era — and one of the last remaining performers of his generation.

Tributes poured in after his death was announced Friday. France’s national Cinematheq­ue museum called him “one of the greatest actors in the history of French cinema.”

Born Dec. 11, 1930, in Piolenc in southern France, near where he died, Mr. Trintignan­t started out acting in the theater but gained broader fame in cinema, notably starring with Brigitte Bardot in “And God ... Created Woman” in 1956. The two had an unabashed off-screen love affair that shocked many. He starred in Italian films and several films by legendary French director Claude Lelouch, most famously “A Man and a Woman” in 1966, which won the Oscar for best foreign film. Mr. Trintignan­t played a race car driver — a passion he pursued offscreen — in a complex romance alongside Anouk Aimee.

Mr. Trintignan­t stopped performing for nearly a decade after the loss of his daughter Marie, also an actor, in 2003. Her boyfriend, French singer Bertrand Cantat, beat her to death during a dispute in a hotel room in Lithuania, where she was making a film.

Mr. Trintignan­t continued acting on stage and on screen into his 80s, and earned new internatio­nal attention in Michael Haneke’s 2013 Oscar-winning drama “Amour,” a raw depiction of an aging couple and the ravages of Alzheimer’s on their love. In his final role on film, Mr. Trintignan­t reunited with Lelouch and Aimee in “The Best Years of a Life,” in 2019.

 ?? ?? Jean-Louis Trintignan­t
Jean-Louis Trintignan­t

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