- Humbert Balsan
Humbert Balsan (
August 21 1954 –February 10 2005 ) was a Frenchfilm producer and chairman of theEuropean Film Academy . He was renowned for securing financing and distribution for diverse and often challenging films.In February 2005, Balsan was found dead in the offices of his production company, Ognon Pictures, in
Paris . He was known to have suffered from depression, and killed himself byhanging .__NOTOC__Early life and career
Born in
Arcachon in 1954, Balsan was part of France's upper class as a member of theWendel family , an industrialdynasty . He received aJesuit education inAmiens and later studiedeconomics inParis . In 1973, Balsan's film career began when he was cast asGawain inRobert Bresson 's "Lancelot Of The Lake" (1974).While Balsan continued to act in small roles in friends's films (he played a
pirate in Jacques Rivette's "Nor'west" (1976)), his interest turned to production. He assisted Bresson on "The Devil, Probably " (1977) in 1976 and lensed a documentary portrait of French music teacherNadia Boulanger the following year.Role of producer
Balsan became a producer in 1978 with the filming of
Pierre Kast 's "Le Soleil en Face" ("Face to the Sun") (1980). The same year, he acted in and co-producedJean-Louis Trintignant 's "Le Maître-nageur" (1979).During the 1980s, Balsan lent not only his screen presence to
Samuel Fuller for the then-expatriate d director's French-language film "Les Voleurs de la nuit" ("Thieves After Dark") (1984) but his Paris apartment as well. Fuller, who lived in France with his wife and daughter for 13 years beginning in 1982, would recount this period in his memoir (with Christa Lang Fuller) "A Third Face: My Tale of Writing, Fighting, and Filmmaking (ISBN 0-375-40165-2).As a patron of France's women filmmakers, Balsan enabled a group that included
Claire Denis ,Sabine Franel ,Brigitte Roüan , andSandrine Veysset . He financed Roüan's "Post Coitum, Animal Triste " (1997) on the stipulation that the director, who like Balsan began her film career in front of the camera, play the film's lead role.Balsan also came to be known as a champion of Arab cinema. He produced
Elia Suleiman 's "Divine Intervention" (2003), which became the first Palestinian film to play at theCannes Film Festival in 2002. It was nominated for thePalme d'Or and eventually won the Grand Jury Prize. The producer returned toCannes in 2004 withYoussef Chahine 's "Alexandria... New York" (2004), his ninth film with theEgypt ian director since 1985's "Adieu, Bonaparte". Balsan also presented "The Gate of the Sun" (2004), his second film withYousry Nasrallah , who adapted the Elias Khoury novel. The 4½-hour epic screened in the Official Selection and depicted the history of Palestine from 1943 to the present. Later that year, Balsan's production "Le Grand Voyage " (2004) won its director, Moroccan émigréIsmaël Ferroukhi , a best first feature prize at the 2004Venice Film Festival .However, the results of Balsan's efforts did not always please everyone. Balsan, who would typically enlist European television and business entities to co-finance Arab region-produced works, was cited by "Al-Ahram Weekly"'s Hani Mustafa for being vulnerable to an investor-friendly system that tends to compromise the stories told in Middle-Eastern films. [http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2003/660/cu1.htm]
Over the course of his career, Balsan played a role in the production of over 60 films, including several for filmmaking pair Merchant-Ivory. Among the last of his films to see a release are Denis's "The Intruder" (2004) and
Lars von Trier 's "Manderlay " (2006), which he co-produced.Notable films
* "Divine Intervention" (2003)
* "Martha...Martha " (2002)
* "Samia " (2001)
* "Rembrandt" (1999)
* "Destiny" (1998)
* "After Sex " (1998)External links
*
References
* [http://arts.guardian.co.uk/news/obituary/0,,1423309,00.html "Humbert Balsan"] by Ronald Bergan, "The Guardian", February 23, 2005, retrieved April 4, 2006
* [http://www.mastersofcinema.org/bresson/TheNews.html#2005-02-11 "Press Release of the French Cinémathèque,"] by Claude Berri, et al., Masters of Cinema website, retrieved April 4, 2006
* [http://www.rouge.com.au/6/balsan.html "Humbert Balsan 1954-2005"] by Dave Kehr, Rouge website, retrieved April 4, 2006
* "When the Tables Are Turned in Adultery's Secret Rooms", by Alan Riding, "New York Times", March 8, 1998
* [http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117905737?categoryid=1228&cs=1 "Featured Player: Humbert Balsan"] by Ali Jaafar, "Variety", May 30, 2004, retrieved April 4, 2006
* [http://dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=10&categ_id=4&article_id=12290 "Producing award-winning Arab cinema"] by Ali Jaafar, "The Daily Star", February 2, 2005, retrieved April 4, 2006
* [http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2003/660/cu1.htm "Three versions of woman"] by Hani Mustafa, "Al-Ahram Weekly", October 16-22, 2003, retrieved April 15, 2006
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