Jacques Natanson

Jacques Joseph Emmanuel Natanson ( born May 15, 1901 in Asnières- sur -Seine, † May 19 1975 in Le Bugue ) was a French playwright, dialogue and screenwriter.

Life

Natanson had sniffed air theater at a young age, as he served the actor, director and innovator of the French theater arts Lugné Poe as a personal secretary. Barely 20 years old, Natanson tried as a playwright and achieved since the early 20s success especially with Boulevard pieces. His early works are in the 20s L'âge heureux, L' enfant TRUQUE, Les Amants saugrenus, Le greluchon délicat, L' infidèle éperdue, Knock Out and more t'attendais.

With the dawn of the talkie era Natanson joined the cinematography. Praised as an excellent dialogue writer Jacques Natanson was mainly for the dialogues committed while rarely whole screenplays ( and usually in collaboration with co-authors ) wrote. 1939 Natanson learned the director Max Ophüls know and wrote the dialogues for the last French work before the German invasion of France, From Mayerling to Sarajevo. The war years had the Jew Natanson into hiding and remained inactive cinematically. In 1946 he continued his work in film.

In 1950 Natanson its cooperation with the home-coming to France Ophüls on and participated in three of his productions, most recently in 1955, Lola Montez. In 1952 he received an Oscar nomination for his involvement in the screenplay for Ophuls ' La Ronde. With the death of Ophüls Natanson returned the movie the back.

Natanson should not be confused with the same director who directed four films 1933-1935.

Filmography

Unless otherwise specified as a dialog or Writer

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