Vincent Perez
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Date of
birth: 10
June 1962
Place of birth: Lausanne, Vaud, Switzerland
Occupation: actor, writer, director
Wife: Karine Silla
Actor turned writer/director Vincent Perez began his career
as French cinema's "jeune premier romantique," its young, pretty-faced
romantic. Journalists dubbed him "monsieur heartthrob" and a "nice
bit of Europe-crumpet." The readers of Paris Match magazine elected him
the World's Sexiest French Speaker. He starred in a series of European costume
dramas, in which he romanced France's top leading ladies - Emmanuelle Béart,
Catherine Deneuve, Isabelle Adjani - and showed a penchant for full frontal
nude scenes.
But he also matured into one of Europe's most gifted players,
winning the prestigious Jean Gabin Prize and garnering several César
nominations. He worked all over the world with many of cinema's greatest filmmakers
before beginning his own promising directing career.
Today, while still admired for his charming good looks, Perez
is ultimately known for his accomplishments and widely praised for his talents.
Born in Lausanne, Switzerland, Perez is the middle child of a German mother
and a Spanish father. An imaginative youngster, he spent the majority of his
time drawing pictures and composing stories. Perez idolized Charlie Chaplin
and soon became interested in writing and producing films. He began putting
on shows at school, which he would star in and direct.
Yet, he dreamed of being a painter, sculptor, or photographer,
and eventually dropped out to enter photography school. While there, he worked
as a photographer's apprentice and took art classes. But the solitary lifestyle
of an artist frightened him and, fearing that he would become too lonely, Perez
quickly returned to acting. He enrolled at the Conservatory of Dramatic Arts
in Geneva, where he studied before moving to Paris in 1984.
He spent two years at the celebrated Conservatory of Dramatic
Arts in Paris and then transferred to the experimental Ecole des Amandiers de
Nanterre, where he trained under famed theater and opera director Patrice Chéreau.
Perez impressed Chéreau, who cast the actor in many of his plays and
is often credited with discovering him. While still in school, the actor made
his big screen debut in Jean-Pierre Limosin's Gardien de la Nuit (Night Guardian)
(1986). Chéreau then tapped Perez for his screen adaptation of Anton
Chekov's Hôtel de France (1987), in which he stood out among ten fellow
actors from Nanterre.
He went onto star opposite Jacqueline Bisset in La Maison de
Jade (The House of Jade) (1988) and as Laerte in a French television production
of Hamlet (1988). A year later, at the insistence of star Gérard Depardieu,
director Jean-Paul Rappeneau cast Perez in the role of the tongue-tied Christian
de Neuvillette in his version of Cyrano de Bergerac (1990). Perez's standout
performance in the internationally acclaimed film earned him a César
nomination for Most Promising Young Actor.
After winning the Jean Gabin Prize for his work in the World
War II drama La Neige et le Feu (Snow and Fire) (1991), Perez landed the romantic
lead in Regis Wargnier's Indochine (Indochina) (1992). The Academy Award-winning
period film starred Perez as a French officer stationed in Indochina who seduces
a plantation owner (Catherine Deneuve) before falling in love with her adopted
Indochinese daughter.
With his reputation as a sex symbol now firmly established,
Perez mocked himself in the romantic comedy Fanfan (1993) by playing a former
lothario abstaining from sex (with French vixen Sophie Marceau in order to make
a relationship work. He then returned to costume dramas to star in Chéreau's
magnificent La Reine Margot (Queen Margot) (1994). Based on Alexandre Dumas'
novel, the bloody historical epic featured Perez as La Môle, a protestant
noble who sacrifices himself for Margot (Isabella Adjani). La Reine Margot took
home the Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival and several César Awards.
Perez went onto join John Malkovich, Fanny Ardant and Marcello
Mastroianni in the international cast of Michaelangelo Antonioni and Wim Wender's
four-part, multi-language collaboration, Par-Delà les Nuages (Beyond
the Clouds) (1995). Starring in the film's final segment, he portrayed a young
man who falls deeply in love with a beautiful girl (Irène Jacob) just
as she is about to enter a convent. Already a star in Europe, Perez began the
second half of the nineties by signing onto three English language films.
Director Tim Pope, who Perez had met briefly after finishing
Le Reine Margot, tapped him to replace the late Brandon Lee in the sequel to
1994's The Crow: City of Angels (1996). Beebee Kidron cast him as a shipwrecked
Russian opposite Rachel Wiesz in Swept from the Sea (1997), her adaptation of
Joseph Conrad's novella Amy Foster. Miramax, Le Reine Margot's U.S. distributor,
offered him the lead role in Nick Hamm's adaptation of Kate O'Brien's novel
Mary Lavelle. Titled Talk of Angels (1998), the film featured Perez as an aristocrat's
son who falls in love with an Irish nanny (Polly Walker) at the start of the
Spanish Civil War.
Before Talk of Angels' release, the actor returned to French
cinema to play a Duke in the swashbuckler Le Bossu (On Guard!) (1997) and earned
his second César nomination. He then appeared as a Serbian Army sniper
in HBO's Shot Through the Heart (1998), and as a transsexual in Chéreau's
Ceux Qui M'Aiment Prendront le Train (Those Who Love Me Can Take the Train)
(1999), for which he received another César nod.
The new millennium saw Perez continuing to work successfully
in both Europe and Hollywood, portraying such memorable real-life figures as
the 18th century French philosopher Denis Diderot in Le Libertin (The Libertine)
(2000), Kuki Gallman's (Kim Bassinger) husband Paolo in I Dreamed of Africa
(2000), and Viennese painter Oskar Kokoschka in Bruce Beresford's Bride of the
Wind (2001). He also gave a scene-stealing, performance as the Roman vampire
Marius in Michael Rymer's adaptation of Anne Rice's The Vampire Chronicles,The
Queen of the Damned (2002), before earning the title role in a remake of Fanfan
la Tulipe (2003).
Over the course of his acting career, Perez began directing
short films and made it his goal to helm a feature before turning forty. On
the set of Indochine, he collaborated with the picture's director, Régis
Wargnier, on L'Éxchange (1992), a short starring his Indochine's co-stars
Dominique Blanc and Andrej Seweryn. The piece, which earned a Golden Palm nomination
for Best Short at the Cannes Film Festival, so impressed Roman Polanski that
the celebrated filmmaker called Perez four times in an effort to convince him
to direct a feature film. In 1999, Perez received his second Golden Palm nomination
for Rien Dire, a short written by his wife, actress Karine Silla. The two then
co-wrote Perez's feature film directorial debut, Peau D'Ange (2002). Financed
by Luc Besson's production company, Europa Corp., the film began shooting one
month shy of Perez's thirty-seventh birthday.
Facts about
Vincent Perez:
Born at 9:58pm-CET
His father is Spanish,
his mother German
Attended drama
school in Geneva and at the Paris Conservatory
Wife, Karine Sylla,
has a daughter, Roxane, by actor Gerald Depardieu. (Vincent's former co-star
in Cyrano De Bergerac (1990). On May 2, 1999, Karine gave birth to Vincent's
first child, a daughter named Iman.
Dated actress Jacqueline
Bisset and model Carla Bruni.
Was born on the
same day as actress Gina Gershon
Welcomed twins (Pablo and Tess) on January 24th, 2003.
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