
.
.Marcel
ACHARD
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Marcel Achard (5 July 1899,
Sainte-Foy-lès-Lyon, Rhône – 4 September 1974) was a French
playwright and screenwriter whose popular sentimental comedies
maintained his position as a highly-recognizable name in his
country's theatrical and literary circles for five decades. He was
elected to the Académie Française in 1959.
A native of the Rhône département's Urban Community of Lyon,
France's second largest metropolitan area, Marcel-Auguste Ferréol
was born in Sainte-Foy-lès-Lyon, one of the city's suburbs, and
adopted his nom de plume at the start of his writing career in the
early 1920s. Able to absorb knowledge quickly, he became, in 1916,
in the midst of World War I, a village schoolteacher at the age of
17. In 1919, a few months after the end of the war, the
20-year-old aspiring writer arrived in Paris and found jobs as a
prompter at the Théâtre du Vieux-Colombier and as a journalist for
various publications, including the major daily newspaper, Le
Figaro.
Marcel Achard wrote his first play in 1922 and had a major success
the following year when renowned actor-director Charles Dullin
staged his play Voulez-vous jouer avec moâ? [Would You
Like to Play with Me?], a sensitively delicate comedy about
circus and its clowns, casting the playwright in a small part, as
one of the clowns. The production set a pattern for the remainder
of his theatrical output, most of which can be considered as 20th
century reworkings of stock characters and situations from the
Italian traditional Commedia dell'arte. The personages of Pierrot
and Columbine are transported into modern-day settings and
inserted into an occasionally mawkish or nostalgic love plot with
equal doses of laughter mingled with pain and regret.
These themes were expanded upon in two of his most popular plays
of the period—1929's Jean de la Lune [John of the Moon
a/k/a The Dreamer] and 1932's Domino. Jean
showed how the unwavering trust of Jef, the faithful Pierrot
prototype, transforms his scandalously adulterous wife into his
idealized image of her, while Domino presented another
unfaithful wife who pays a gigolo to make a pretense of courting
her so as to distract her husband from her real lover, but the
gigolo manages to act his character with such pretend sincerity
that she winds up falling in love with this fictional persona.
The distinctive quality of Achard's plays was their dreamlike mood
of sentimental melancholy, underscored by the very titles which
were primarily taken from popular bittersweet songs of the day.
1924's Marlbrough s'en va-t-en guerre [Marlborough Gets
Himself Off to War], 1935's Noix de coco [Coconuts],
1946's Auprès de ma blonde [Close to My Girlfriend]
and Savez-vous planter les choux? [Do You Know How to
Plant Cabbage?] and 1948's Nous irons à Valparaiso [We're
Going to Valparaiso] are among some examples of this specific
style.
Achard's greatest successes and popularity were in the period
between the two World Wars when contemporary critics favorably
compared him to some of his renowned French predecessors such as
Pierre de Marivaux and Alfred de Musset. Postwar pundits were not
as kind, pointing out the rather narrow scope of human psyche that
he represented and deprecatingly referring to him as a
"spécialiste de l'amour" ["love specialist"] for the sickly-sweet
characteristics of his poetic imagination.
The critics focused, of course, on Achard's most popular plays,
disregarding the fact that the reason Achard continued to write
them is precisely because they met with such unvarying success.
His less-well known works, however, show innovative techniques and
original themes. 1929's La Belle Marinière [The
Beautiful Lady of the Canals a/k/a The Beautiful Bargewoman]
still has some of the excessively-poetic dialogue, but is overall
a realistic play about a love triangle involving a bargeman, his
wife and his best friend and companion. Similarly, 1933's La
femme en blanc [The Woman in White] uses a then-new
technique of recreating for the audience events as they are being
described by the play's characters. In 1938's Le corsaire [The
Privateer], a "play-in-a-play" device, pioneered by Luigi
Pirandello, depicts film actors portraying the life of a long-ago
pirate, finding themselves caught in an endless loop of
similarities. The same year saw the production of his most
controversial play, Adam, which strove to give insight into
the conflicted emotions of an unhappy homosexual. Although the
very subject matter caused it to be considered scandalous at the
time, its brief revival three decades later, in the open and
radicalized culture of the late 1960s, when the author was
approaching his 70th birthday, found the once-ahead-of-its-time
work judged as a tame and dated period piece below Achard's usual
literary standard.
After World War II, despite the
criticism, Achard's literary output continued unabated. Among his
most successful later plays were 1952's Les compagnons de la
Marjolaine [The Companions of Marjoram] and 1955's
Le mal d'amour [Love Sickness]. The greatest
popularity, however, was achieved by a 1957 comedy about a testy,
ill-tempered character nicknamed Patate [Spud] and a
1962 comic mystery L'idiote [The Idiot], best known
in America as the basis for the play and film A Shot in the
Dark.
Four of Achard's plays also had Broadway runs. Domino,
adapted by actress-writer Grace George, opened at the Playhouse
Theatre on 16 August 1932 and closed after seven performances. The
title role went to Rod La Rocque, a top star of the silent cinema,
whose career was on the wane following the advent of the talkies,
and the lead actress was Jessie Royce Landis. Seventeen years
later, a much better run was enjoyed by Auprès de ma blonde,
which was reworked by famed scenarist S. N. Behrman into I Know
My Love. It opened at the Shubert Theatre on 2 November 1949
and ran for 247 performances, closing on 3 June 1950. It was
directed by and starred Alfred Lunt and his leading lady was, as
always, his wife, Lynn Fontanne. Nine years after that premiere,
however, Patate, which played to sold-out theaters in
Paris, could not translate its elusive charm to American audiences
and repeated the seven-performance fiasco of the previous
single-name character, Domino. The fellow whose nickname
made up the title was played by Tom Ewell, and the female lead,
Susan Oliver, won the Theatre World Award for her performance,
while the Irwin Shaw adaptation opened at Henry Miller's Theatre
on 28 October 1958 and closed on November 1. Ultimately, it would
be A Shot in the Dark, three years later, which would boast
the longest run. Adapted by Harry Kurnitz and directed by Harold
Clurman, it racked up an impressive 389 performances, opening at
the Booth Theatre on 18 October 1961 and closing on 22 September
1962. The stars were Julie Harris, Walter Matthau and William
Shatner.
Achard's numerous screenplays, frequently centering on relatively
recent historical events and personalities, include 1936's
Mayerling, 1938's Orage and 1942's Félicie Nanteuil.
He presided over the Cannes Film Festival in 1958 and 1959 and had
a similar role at the Venice Film Festival in 1960. It was also in
1959 that he was finally, at the age of 60, elected to the
Académie Française.
Marcel Achard died of diabetes in his Paris home two months after
his 75th birthday. He was survived by his wife, Lily.
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