Anne Fontaine (born Anne-Fontaine Sibertin-Blanc; 15 July 1959) is a Luxembourger
film director
A film director controls a film's artistic and dramatic aspects and visualizes the screenplay (or script) while guiding the film crew and actors in the fulfilment of that vision. The director has a key role in choosing the cast members, p ...
,
screenwriter
A screenplay writer (also called screenwriter, scriptwriter, scribe or scenarist) is a writer who practices the craft of screenwriting, writing screenplays on which mass media, such as films, television programs and video games, are based.
...
, and former actress. She lives and works in France.
Life and career
Born Anne-Fontaine Sibertin-Blanc in Luxembourg, sister of actor Jean-Chrétien Sibertin-Blanc, she went as a young child to live in Lisbon, where her father, Antoine Sibertin-Blanc, is a music professor and cathedral organist. In adolescence she moved to Paris and trained in dance with Joseph Russillo while continuing her academic education, including philosophy. Her husband is Philippe Carcassonne, the film producer, and they have an adopted son, Tienne, who was born in Cambodia.
While still dancing, she was picked by Robert Hossein to play Esmeralda in a 1980 theatrical production of ''
The Hunchback of Notre Dame'' and around this time started to use the name Anne Fontaine. She continued with acting and became known for her roles in comedies like ''Si ma gueule vous plaît...'' (1981) and ''P.R.O.F.S.''(1985). An opportunity to be assistant director came with a 1986 stage version of
Louis-Ferdinand Céline's ''
Journey to the End of the Night'' at the Renaud-Barrault theatre.
Fontaine's first project as solo director, ''Les Histoires d'amour finissent mal... en général'' (''Love Affairs Usually End Badly''), won the 1993
Prix Jean Vigo
The Prix Jean Vigo is an award in the Cinema of France given annually since 1951 to a French film director in homage to Jean Vigo. It was founded by French writer Claude Aveline. Since 1960, the award is given to a director of a feature film and ...
. In 1995, she worked with her brother on the comedy ''
Augustin''. Two years later, she wrote and directed the successful ''
Dry Cleaning'' (''Nettoyage à Sec''). It won the Best Screenplay award at the
1997 Venice Film Festival
The 54th annual Venice International Film Festival was held between 27 August to 6 September 1997.
Jury
The following people comprised the 1997 jury:
* Jane Campion (New Zealand) (head of jury)
* Ronald Bass (USA)
* Véra Belmont (France)
* ...
and is generally considered a milestone on Fontaine's way to becoming "an important figure in contemporary French cinema".
In 1999 the character Augustin (Jean-Chrétien Sibertin-Blanc) re-appeared in Fontaine's film ''
Augustin, King of Kung-Fu''. ''
How I Killed My Father'' was released in 2001, and ''
Nathalie...'' followed in 2003. The 2005 film, ''
Entre ses mains'' was widely described as a thriller: an "intimate thriller" according to Fontaine herself. A third Augustin film, ''
Nouvelle chance
''Oh La La!'' (original title: ''Nouvelle chance'') is a 2006 French comedy-drama film directed by Anne Fontaine. It was screened out of competition at the 2006 Cannes Film Festival.
Cast
* Danielle Darrieux - Odette Saint-Gilles
* Arielle Dombas ...
'' (also known as ''Oh La La'') was released in 2006. Then came ''
The Girl From Monaco'' in 2008 and ''
Coco Before Chanel'', her biopic of
Coco Chanel, in 2009.
Fontaine's work is not easily categorised, though the phrase "psychological drama" is often used. She told a UK newspaper, "I try to work on my characters' blind side, in a kind of Freudian way: to ask, 'What are the things about themselves that they're unaware of?' I'm fascinated by the irony of fate, when something goes into a skid. All my stories have an element of cruelty in them."
While knowing that the movement of "women's cinema" worked as a counter to the classical Hollywood system, Fontaine didn't like to identify with this. During an interview in 1998 with Eve-Laure Moros, she stated: "If people say that 'Nettoyage a sec' is a woman's film, I'm very surprised, I don't know what that means... I think that to be a filmmaker, as far as sexuality, it's something that's really de-sexualizing. That is, you become a bizarre thing, when you're directing a film---during the shooting, you're neither a man nor a woman, you're really something strange and very ambivalent."
Filmography
As filmmaker
As actress
See also
*
List of female film and television directors
*
List of LGBT-related films directed by women
References
External links
*
{{DEFAULTSORT:Fontaine, Anne
1959 births
Living people
French women film directors
20th-century French actresses
French women screenwriters
French film actresses
French television actresses
People from Luxembourg City
Luxembourgian screenwriters
Luxembourgian women screenwriters
20th-century French screenwriters
20th-century French women writers
20th-century Luxembourgian writers
20th-century Luxembourgian women writers
21st-century French screenwriters
21st-century French women writers
21st-century Luxembourgian writers
21st-century Luxembourgian women writers