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- <text id=91TT0235>
- <title>
- Feb. 04, 1991: Gerard Depardieu:Life In A Big Glass
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Feb. 04, 1991 Stalking Saddam
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SHOW BUSINESS, Page 68
- Life in a Big Glass
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Gerard Depardieu has an appetite for wine, words and stardom
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Corliss--Reported by Victoria Foote-Greenwell/Paris
- </p>
- <p> Gerard Depardieu, France's best and best-known actor, is a
- glutton for adventure. He eats with two hands, acts with both
- fists. Onscreen he radiates wild energy, acting from his
- capacious gut, whispering or raging as the role allows and the
- moment demands. He embodies the primal male caged in modern
- society, ever raising the ante on his own anarchic instincts.
- To call him a bear of a man is to give bears too much credit;
- they have not his strut, his growl, his formidable charisma.
- It is said that when French bears see a particularly imposing
- member of their species, they exclaim, "Ah, mon Dieu! Un
- Depardieu!"
- </p>
- <p> To older American moviegoers, the archetypal Frenchman was
- a suave seducer: Maurice Chevalier, Charles Boyer, Louis
- Jourdan. But French audiences preferred men of the earth--Raimu, Jean Gabin, Jean-Paul Belmondo--to men of the world.
- Depardieu, 42, is cut from this rough cloth. This versatile
- actor can play comical, tragical and historical, as well as
- pastoral, but his most famous roles are as peasants: the duped
- Jean de Florette, the mysterious Martin Guerre, the noble Olmo
- in Bertolucci's 1900. He has assayed the holy fools of French
- history and literature: Danton, Tartuffe and, in a recent
- triumph playing in the U.S., Cyrano de Bergerac.
- </p>
- <p> "He is the heir of Jean Gabin--the soul of France," says
- Bertrand Blier, writer-director of six Depardieu films,
- including the Oscar-winning Get Out Your Handkerchiefs and the
- new Merci la Vie. "Like all the great talents, Gerard is a raw
- talent--art brut. They learn a little technique doing
- theater, but the rest is inside them. Brando, Dustin Hoffman,
- Mastroianni: he's in that great class." Like those actors,
- Depardieu is capable of melodramatic excess; to give all is
- sometimes to give too much. But also like them, he has set an
- indelible stamp on his country's films, defining current French
- cinema as fully as any auteur.
- </p>
- <p> Now he has set his sights on America, with his first
- Hollywood film, Green Card. In this featherweight comedy he is
- a French musician looking for residence status and finding love
- and sweet sorrow with Andie MacDowell in exotic Manhattan. For
- Depardieu, though, the piece is just a five-finger exercise.
- Director Peter Weir, who wrote the film for the actor, is
- looking for charm--any star can manufacture that--without
- Depardieu's scary power. The bear is reduced to a puppy dog.
- </p>
- <p> Close up, offscreen, Depardieu gives you the charm and the
- power. The man can swagger sitting down. His lank hair, which
- looks as if he swiped it from a schoolgirl who has played hooky
- all year long, frames a huge face--bulbous nose and ship-prow
- chin dominating the small, lively eyes. Devouring a steak over
- lunch at the swank George V hotel in Paris, he cascades
- opinions on any subject, from Dostoyevsky to David Letterman,
- punctuating his effusions with grand, intense gestures. When
- a waitress arrives to pour the St. Pourcain, Depardieu proffers
- the larger of his two stem glasses. "But, Monsieur, that's for
- the water," she admonishes. "No, no," replies the proud owner
- of vineyards in Burgundy and Anjou, "I like wine in a big
- glass."
- </p>
- <p> Depardieu, who has two children, 19 and 17, with his wife
- Elizabeth, also likes life in a big glass. As a child, though,
- he drank too much too soon--so much so that his early years
- play like a more desperate version of his first hit film, Going
- Places, in which he was a petty thief and vicious womanizer.
- The son of an illiterate weaver in the nowhere town of
- Chateauroux, young Gerard stole cars and sold black-market
- cigarettes and whiskey to American soldiers at a nearby Army
- base. He carried a gun at school. "But that was a child's
- game," he shrugs. "I just had the gun a week, to show it to my
- friends." And what of his story that at nine he participated in
- his first rape? "Yes." And after that, there were many rapes?
- </p>
- <p>circumstances. That was part of my childhood."
- </p>
- <p> In this childhood Gerard was predator as well as victim, yet
- it created in him an ache for advancement. He quit school at
- 15 and, through copious, self-administered doses of
- Dostoyevsky, soon fell under the spell of language. It was love
- at first sentence. "I first read so that I could communicate,"
- he says. "But the difference in social classes was so enormous!
- If you come from a background like mine, you aren't able to
- speak. No one says, `I love you.' Everyone screams, cries or
- is afraid. When I arrived in my first drama class and heard the
- words Je t'aime, I thought, `There are people who can say
- that!'"
- </p>
- <p> For a time, Depardieu could say nothing. "I lost the power
- to speak," he recalls. "I was dumb, from hyperemotion, and
- because I felt overwhelmed by everything I was reading. I was
- able to find words by speaking out loud the words I was
- reading. And it was then, at that moment, that everything
- became unblocked. It was like a second birth." Since then he
- has spoken the French of Rostand and Moliere on screens around
- the world. In Green Card he speaks English, heavily garnished
- but with assurance. He can even tell when he has been insulted
- by a TV-talk-show host. "Letterman is very fast, very cynical,
- very sarcastic. I don't mind that. I don't need to be
- intelligent or not intelligent. There are moments I am a
- complete idiot, and others when I'm less of an idiot. That's
- all."
- </p>
- <p> The Idiot. Who wrote that book? No matter: Gerard Depardieu
- could play the part. He has the appetite for it.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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