Porterville Recorder

Belmondo, star of ‘Breathless, dies at 88

- By THOMAS ADAMSON and SAMUEL PETREQUIN

PARIS — Jean-paul Belmondo, star of the iconic French New Wave film “Breathless,” whose crooked boxer’s nose and rakish grin went on to make him one of the country’s most recognizab­le leading men, has died at 88.

His death was confirmed Monday by the office of his lawyer, Michel Godest. No cause of death was given.

Belmondo’s career spanned half a century. In the 1960s, he embodied a new type of male movie star, one characteri­zed by pure virility rather than classic good looks. He went on to appear in more than 80 films and worked with a variety of major French directors, from Francois Truffaut to Claude Lelouch and Jean-luc Godard, whose 1960 movie “Breathless” (“Au Bout de Souffle” in its original French title) brought both men lasting acclaim.

Belmondo’s career choices were equally varied, from acclaimed art house films to critically lukewarm action and comedy films later in his career.

His unconventi­onal looks — flattened nose, full lips and muscular frame — allowed him to play roles from thug to police officer, thief to priest, Cyrano de Bergerac to an unshakable secret agent. Belmondo was also a gifted athlete who often did his own stunts.

French President Emmanuel Macron called the actor a “national treasure” in an homage on Twitter and Instagram, recalling the actor’s panache, his laugh and his versatilit­y. Belmondo was at once a “sublime hero” and “a familiar figure,” Macron wrote. “In him, we all recognize ourselves.”

France bounded into Belmondo mode at news of his death, with praise from politician­s of all stripes pouring in. The media played old movie clips that caught the athletic Belmondo in the heart-stopping acrobatics he was known to love, from sliding down a rooftop to climbing up a rope ladder from a moving convertibl­e.

“I’m devastated,” an emotional Alain Delon, another top cinema star, said of the death of his longtime friend on Cnews.

Even Paris police headquarte­rs offered its condolence­s for Belmondo, who played a police officer in numerous films, tweeting that “a great movie cop has left us.”

Belmondo, affectiona­tely known as Bebel, was born on April 9, 1933, in the Paris suburb of Neuilly-sur-seine into an artistic family. His father was renowned sculptor Paul Belmondo and his mother, Sarah Rainaud-richard, was a painter.

Belmondo played soccer and trained as a boxer before quitting school at 16. He took up acting in the 1950s at the Paris Conservato­ry, where one of his teachers, Pierre Dux, famously told him that his career as a leading man was doomed because of his looks. People would burst into laughter if they saw an actress in Belmondo’s arms, Dux said, according to biographer Bertrand Tessier.

French theater critic Jeanjacque­s Gautier wasn’t impressed either, once saying: “Mr. Belmondo will never enjoy success with his ruffian’s mug.”

At his final conservato­ry competitio­n, the jury failed to give him the recognitio­n he thought he deserved — so he gave the judges an obscene parting gesture.

The star began acting in small provincial theaters and caught the eye of aspiring filmmaker Godard in Paris in 1958, who asked him to appear in a short film. At first, Belmondo didn’t take Godard seriously.

“I spoke to my wife about it, and she said, ‘Go ahead. If (Godard) hassles you, punch him,’” Belmondo told the Liberation newspaper in 1999.

Belmondo was given his first important role by director Claude Sautet in “Classe tous risques” (Consider All Risks).

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