Jacques Companeez[1] (Russian: Яков Компанеец, Yaakov Kompanéyets, born in Nizhyn, Russian Empire 1906–1956)[2] was a Russian Jewish émigré screenwriter in Paris.
Jacques Companeez | |
---|---|
Born | 5 March 1906 |
Died | 15 September 1956 (aged 50) Paris (France) |
Occupation | Screenwriter |
He arrived in Paris in 1936 after study in Berlin, and wrote 80 screenplays, one of his first being co-writing Les Bas-fonds for Jean Renoir (1936).[3] His older daughter is the contralto Irène Companeez, who recorded with Maria Callas and was married to great Italian baritone Dino Dondi. His younger daughter Nina Companeez was also a screenwriter.[4]
Selected screenplays
edit- A Thousand for One Night (1933)
- In the Service of the Tsar (1936)
- The Lower Depths (Les Bas-fonds), directed by Jean Renoir (1936)
- Feu! , directed by Jacques de Baroncelli (1937)
- The Alibi, directed by Pierre Chenal (1937)
- The Cheat (1937)
- Princess Tarakanova, directed by Fedor Ozep (1938)
- La Maison du Maltais , directed by Pierre Chenal (1938)
- Katia, directed by Maurice Tourneur (1938)
- Gibraltar, directed by Fedor Ozep (1938)
- I Was an Adventuress (1938)
- The Postmaster's Daughter (1938)
- Personal Column, directed by Robert Siodmak (1939)
- The Emigrant (1940)
- Serenade, directed by Jean Boyer (1940)
- A Woman in the Night (1943)
- The Inevitable Monsieur Dubois (1943)
- Florence Is Crazy (1944)
- Secret Documents (1945)
- As Long as I Live, directed by Jacques de Baroncelli (1946)
- A Friend Will Come Tonight, directed by Raymond Bernard (1946)
- Impasse , directed by Pierre Dard (1946)
- Devil and the Angel (1946), directed by Pierre Chenal (1946)
- Goodbye Darling, directed by Raymond Bernard (1946)
- Counter Investigation, directed by Jean Faurez (1947)
- Copie conforme , directed by Jean Dréville (1947)
- The Damned, directed by René Clément (1947)
- Monsieur Wens Holds the Trump Cards, directed by Emile-Georges De Meyst (1947)
- A Cop (1947)
- Gunman in the Streets, directed by Frank Tuttle (1950)
- The Man from Jamaica, directed by Maurice de Canonge (1950)
- Casque d'Or, directed by Jacques Becker (1952)
- Adorable Creatures, directed by Christian-Jaque (1952)
- Pleasures of Paris (1952)
- Full House, directed by Henri Verneuil (1952)
- Forbidden Fruit, directed by Henri Verneuil (1952)
- Jeunes Mariés , directed by Gilles Grangier (1953)
- Les Compagnes de la nuit, directed by Ralph Habib (1953)
- Tempest in the Flesh, directed by Ralph Habib (1954)
- It's the Paris Life (1954)
- Orient Express (1954)
- Queen Margot, directed by Jean Dréville (1954)
- The Lovers of Lisbon, directed by Henri Verneuil (1955)
- The Blue Danube (1955)
- Blackmail (1955)
- Scandal in Montmartre (1955)
- Stopover in Orly (1955)
- Nagana (1955)
- La Sorcière, directed by André Michel (1956)
- Women's Club, directed by Ralph Habib (1956)
- Folies-Bergère, directed by Henri Decoin (1957)
- I'll Get Back to Kandara, directed by Victor Vicas (1957)
- The Seventh Commandment (1957)
References
edit- ^ His surname is occasionally found accented é to indicate the Russian pronunciation "Kompané-ez"
- ^ Яков Компанеец (1906-1956)
- ^ Roger Boussinot L'encyclopédie du cinéma 1980 - Volume 1 - Page 316 "Dix films, pour la seule année 1946, sont bâtis sur des idées ou des scénarios de Jacques Companeez. Et dans ces dix films, il y a les maudits, probablement le chef-d'œuvre de René Clément."
- ^ Françoise Audé Ciné-modèles cinéma d'elles.: Situations de femmes dans le cinéma 1981 Page 77 "[Michel Deville]... Il ne se lance alors pas seul dans l'aventure : avec lui, une scénariste-dialoguiste brillante, Nina Companeez. Elle était la fille de Jacques Companeez qui fut le scénariste de Jacques Becker. Elle était, en outre, monteuse."