Isabelle Huppert

Isabelle Huppert Anne ( born March 16, 1953 in Paris ) is a French film and theater actress. Huppert is one of the highest and most awarded actresses of her generation.

  • 4.1 César
  • 4.2 Chlotrudis Awards
  • 4.3 Coppa Volpi
  • 4.4 European Film Awards
  • 4.5 International Film Festival of Cannes
  • 4.6 Molière
  • 4.7 Prix Lumière
  • 4.8 more

Family

Isabelle Huppert - daughter of the safety engineer Raymond Huppert and the English teacher Annick Huppert - has with Caroline ( director ), Jacqueline and Elizabeth (actress ) three sisters and the brother Rémi. Isabelle Huppert has been married to Ronald Chammah since 1982. The couple has three children: daughter Lolita Chammah (1983 ) is an actress and played in Copacabana their movie daughter. Her youngest son was born in 1998.

Isabelle Huppert lives in Paris.

Life and career

At the age of fourteen took Isabelle Huppert at the Conservatoire de Versailles acting classes, the classes with Jean -Laurent Cochet followed. It was the beginning of a career in the theater.

Film

In 1971, she made ​​her film debut in Faustine et le bel été. One of the early highlights of her film career include The Savvy, The Judge and the Assassin and The Lacemaker. Later films cemented her reputation as a performer profound characters, whose fragile appearance contrasts with her strength of will, such as The Lady of the Camellias. They often turned director Claude Chabrol with, with whom she had a deep artistic understanding. Multiple they also played under the direction of Michael Haneke, for which she was recently awarded for the role of Erika Kohut in The Piano Teacher at the film festival in Cannes as best actress.

In 1980, she tried the jump to Hollywood; Michael Cimino's Heaven's Gate came late Western but one of the biggest flops in film history; American films remained the exception. So she turned 1987 The Bedroom Window, in 1994 Amateur of director Hal Hartley, and in 2004 I ♥ Huckabees.

In May 2009, Huppert took over at the 62nd International Film Festival in Cannes, the Office of the Jury President. The main prize of the Palme d'Or, the contribution was awarded The White Ribbon by the Austrian Michael Haneke. In 1984, she was next to Michel Deville and Stanley Donen member of the jury at Cannes, which had awarded under the guidance of the British actor Dirk Bogarde the drama Paris, Texas by Wim Wenders with the Palme d'Or.

Theater

In addition to her film work Huppert also appeared again and again as successful stage actress in appearance. In French and European stages they took over both leading roles in classic plays such as Shakespeare's Measure for Measure (Paris, 1991) and Schiller's Mary Stuart (London, 1996), as well as in contemporary fabrics such as Sarah Kane's 4.48 Psychosis (Paris, 2002; Berlin, 2005), Heiner Müller's Quartet (Paris and Berlin, 2006 ), Yasmina Reza's God of Carnage (2008 ), or Krzysztof Warlikowski Un Tramway (Paris and Berlin, 2010 ). For the title roles in Un mois à la campagne, Virginia Woolf's Orlando, Euripides' Medea and Ibsen's Hedda Gabler, she was nominated five times for a Molière for Best Actress, but was the most important French theater price does not win yet.

As a singer Huppert was responsible, along with Jean -Louis Murat for the song cycle Madame Deshoulières (2001), it took over a year later a vocal part in the film 8 Women ( 2002).

Filmography (selection)

Awards

Isabelle Huppert won numerous awards, including the 1996 César for Best Actress for her role of Joan in the movie beasts of Claude Chabrol. In addition, she was nominated 13 other times and thus more often than any other actress for the César. Twice she was named Best Actress at the International Film Festival in Cannes, 1978 Chabrol's Violette Nozière and 2001 for The Piano Teacher, based on the novel by Elfriede Jelinek. In 2002 she received along with her ​​seven partners a Silver Bear at the Berlinale for the crime comedy 8 Women. In November 2011, the actress received the 10,000 euro Actor Award The Europe of the International Filmfest Braunschweig.

César

Chlotrudis Awards

  • 2003: Award for Best Actress for The Piano Teacher
  • 2003: Award for Best Supporting Actress ( Audience Award ) for 8 women

Coppa Volpi

European Film Awards

  • 2001: Award for Best Actress for The Piano Teacher
  • 2002: Award for Best Actress (along with the ensemble) for 8 women
  • 2004: Nominated for the Jameson Audience Award - Best Actress for My Mother
  • 2009: Award for the best European performance in world cinema

International Film Festival of Cannes

Molière

Prix ​​Lumière

More

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