Maurice Delbez (28 July 1922 – 23 March 2020) was a French film director.[1]

Maurice Delbez
Delbez in 2011
Born28 July 1922
Died23 March 2020(2020-03-23) (aged 97)
NationalityFrench
OccupationDirector

Biography

edit

From the age of 12, Delbez attended the Lycée Charlemagne in Paris. His parents sold their bistro and took up multiple jobs to help pay for this education. During World War II, Delbez, along with other self-proclaimed pacifist students, led a series of protests against German Occupation.

While working in the office of the Treasury, Delbez met Comédie-Française member Julien Bertheau, who inspired Delbez to create a theatre troupe. Summoned to the Service du travail obligatoire in 1943, he was able to cross the dividing line with false papers and join the Free France forces in Auvergne.

After the war, Delbez entered the Institut des hautes études cinématographiques. The actor Pierre Fresnay put him in contact with director Maurice Cloche, with whom he would direct several films as an assistant. Delbez worked alongside Jean Grémillon, Robert Bresson, Guy Lefranc, and Darry Cowl. His best known film is On Foot, on Horse, and on Wheels. In 1963, he adapted Robert Sabatier's Alain et le Nègre. However, the film was titled Rue des Cascades.

Delbez also worked in television, notably producing documentaries such as "La Mémoire aux images", which was broadcast on France 3. His documentaries were typically broadcast on France 3 and France 2.

He wrote his autobiography, Ma vie racontée à mon chien cinéphile, in 2001. It was published by L'Harmattan.

In May 2017, the Société nouvelle de cinématographie (SNC) and Celluloid Angels raised funds to restore Rue des Cascades. In 2018, M6 restored the film and released it on DVD. The channel also restored and distributed other Delbez films. In 2019, Rue des Cascades was screened in Salon-de-Provence.

Maurice Delbez died on 23 March 2020 at the age of 97.[2]

Filmography

edit

Director

edit

Screenwriter

edit

Assistant Director

edit

Production Manager

edit
  • Les Idoles (1968)
  • La Grande Frime (1977)

Technical Advisor

edit
  • Le Panier à crabes (1960)
  • Les Nymphettes (1961)
  • Jaloux comme un tigre (1964)
  • Le Paria (1969)[3]

References

edit
  1. ^ "Maurice Delbez (1922-2020)". Le Film du jour (in French). 25 March 2020.
  2. ^ Maurice Delbez, une vie en cascades
  3. ^ "Maurice Delbez". IMDb.