French movie giant Alain Delon dies aged 88
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[August 19, 2024]
PARIS (Reuters) -French actor Alain Delon, who melted the hearts
of millions of film fans whether playing a murderer, hoodlum or hitman
in his postwar heyday, has died, his three children said on Sunday. He
was 88.
Delon had been in poor health since suffering a stroke in 2019, rarely
leaving his estate in Douchy, in France's Val de Loire region.
President Emmanuel Macron hailed him as a giant of French culture.
"Alain Delon has played legendary roles and made the world dream.
Lending his unforgettable face to shake up our lives. Melancholic,
popular, secretive, he was more than a star: he was a French monument,"
he posted on X.
With striking blue eyes, Delon was sometimes referred to as the "French
Frank Sinatra" for his handsome looks, a comparison Delon disliked.
Unlike Sinatra, who always denied connections with the Mafia, Delon
openly acknowledged his shady pals in the underworld.
In a 1970 interview with the New York Times, Delon was asked about such
acquaintances, one of whom was among the last "Godfathers" of the
underworld in the Mediterranean port of Marseille.
"Most of them the gangsters I know ... were my friends before I became
an actor," he said. "I don't worry about what a friend does. Each is
responsible for his own act. It doesn't matter what he does."
DELON STARRED IN VISCONTI, MELVILLE, LOSEY FILMS
Delon shot to fame in two films by Italian director Luchino Visconti,
"Rocco and His Brothers" in 1960 and "The Leopard" in 1963.
He starred alongside Jean Gabin in Henri Verneuil's 1963 film "Melodie
en Sous-Sol" ("Any Number Can Win") and was a major hit in Jean-Pierre
Melville's 1967 "Le Samourai" ("The Godson"). The role of a
philosophical contract killer involved minimal dialogue and frequent
solo scenes, and Delon shone.
Delon became a star in France and was idolised by men and women in
Japan, but never made it as big in Hollywood despite performing with
American cinema giants, including Burt Lancaster when the Frenchman
played apprentice-hitman Scorpio in the eponymous 1973 film.
In the 1970 film "Borsalino", he starred with fellow French actor
Jean-Paul Belmondo, playing gangsters who come to blows in an
unforgettable, stylised fight over a woman.
Crowning moments also included 1969 erotic thriller "La Piscine" ("The
Swimming Pool"), where Delon paired up with real-life lover Romy
Schneider, in a sultry French Riviera saga of jealously and seduction.
Delon's stand-out film in the 1970s - a decade during which he and
Belmondo were staples of the French box office - was the 1976 Joseph
Losey film "Monsieur Klein" in which he plays an art dealer in occupied
Paris during World War Two who is taken for a Jewish fugitive of the
same name.
TROUBLED MAN
Born just outside Paris on November 8, 1935, Delon was put in foster
care aged four after his parents divorced.
He ran away from home at least once and was expelled several times from
boarding schools before joining the Marines at 17 and serving in then
French-ruled Indochina. There too he got into trouble over a stolen
jeep.
Back in France in the mid-50s, he worked as a porter at Paris wholesale
food market, Les Halles, and spent time in the red-light Pigalle
district before migrating to the cafes of the bohemian St. Germain des
Pres area.
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Alain Delon and daughter Anouchka Delon, 72nd Cannes Film Festival,
May 19, 2019. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe
There he met French actor
Jean-Claude Brialy, who took him to the Cannes Film Festival, where
he attracted the attention of an American talent scout who arranged
a screen test.
He made his film debut in 1957 in "Quand la femme s'en mele" ("Send
a Woman When the Devil Fails").
SULPHUROUS FRIENDS
Delon was a businessman as well as an actor, leveraging his looks to
sell branded cosmetics and dabbling in race horses with old
underworld friends. He invested in a racehorse stable with Jacky "Le
Mat" Imbert, a notorious figure in a thriving Marseille crime scene.
Delon's more louche friendships exploded to the surface when a
former bodyguard-cum-confidant, a young Yugoslav called Stefan
Markovic, was found dead in a bag, with a bullet in his head,
discarded in a rubbish dump near Paris.
The actor was interrogated and cleared by police but the "Markovic
Affair" snowballed into a national scandal.
The man police charged with the Markovic murder - he was later
acquitted - was Francois Marcantoni, a Corsican cafe owner and
friend of Delon who thrived in the hustle and bustle of the Pigalle
district in the aftermath of World War Two.
OUTSPOKEN
Delon was outspoken off-stage and courted controversy - notably when
he said he regretted the abolition of the death penalty and spoke
disparagingly of gay marriage, which was legalised in France in
2013.
He publicly defended the far-right National Front and telephoned its
founder Jean-Marie Le Pen, an old friend, to congratulate him when
the party did well in local elections in 2014.
Delon's lovers included Schneider and German model-turned-singer
Nico, with whom he had a son. In 1964, he married Nathalie
Barthelemy and fathered a second son before ending the marriage and
embarking on a 15-year relationship with Mireille Darc. He had two
more children with Dutch model Rosalie van Breemen.
Delon told Paris Match in an interview in 2018 he was fed up with
modern life and had a chapel and tomb ready for him on the grounds
of his home near Geneva, and for his Belgian shepherd dog, called
Loubo.
Delon's last major public appearance was to receive an honorary
Palme d'Or at the Cannes film festival in May 2019.
In recent years, Delon was the centre of a family feud over his
care, which made headlines in French media.
In April 2024 a judge placed Delon under "reinforced curatorship",
meaning he no longer had full freedom to manage his assets. He was
already under legal protection over concerns over his health and
well-being.
(Additional reporting by John Irish, Dominique Vidalon, Benoit Van
OverstreatenEditing by Richard Lough, Andrew Heavens and Frances
Kerry)
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