An exceedingly charming and debonair leading man who became a symbol of the Gallic
gentleman to moviegoers worldwide, Yves Montand was also a very famous singer who
received his start performing in Paris nightclubs during World War II. After
establishing himself in that profession, Montand also made his mark in the movies, first
in France and later in Hollywood opposite some of the top leading ladies of the time,
including, most famously, off-screen lover Marilyn Monroe. Montand's gifts as a singer
were widely celebrated, leading to many popular recordings and highly successful
performances in various countries and at The New York Metropolitan Opera and on
Broadway. Throughout his motion picture career, Montand often portrayed rugged,
world-weary men, but off set, he was famous for his enthusiasm, dedication and
imagination. Just as contradictory was his appeal, which straddled the entire spectrum
of French society even though he was embraced as a symbol of the proletariat and was a
vociferous supporter of leftist politics. While likely remembered best today for his
vocal gifts and work in lighter motion pictures like "Let's Make Love" (1960), when
properly challenged by directors on the level of Henri-Georges Clouzot and Costa-Gavras,
Montand proved quite capable of giving persuasive dramatic performances and that talent
solidified his legacy as one of the most important European stars of that era.
Although he was regarded as quintessentially French, Yves Montand was actually Italian.
He was born on Oct. 13, 1921 in Monsummano Terme, Italy under the name Ivo Livi. Three
years later, his Jewish family immigrated to France to flee the rising Right Wing
influence in Italy, becoming French citizens in 1929. Montand attended school until age
11 in Marseilles, when he was put to work following the bankruptcy of his father's
broom-making business. He held jobs in a hairdressing salon, a spaghetti factory, and on
the waterfront, but really longed to be a performer. After working to overcome his stage
fright, Montand made his debut in 1938 and was quickly a regular on the music hall
scene. He crafted the name Yves Montand from the Italian his mother used when calling
him to come upstairs ("Ivo, monta!"). Managing to avoid being sent to a labor camp
through bribery, he relocated to Paris in 1943. Superstar Edith Piaf saw one of
Montand's performances - he specialized in French versions of "cowboy songs" with his
big hit being ''Dans les Plaines du Far West" - the following year and made him her
opening act at the Moulin Rouge. The pair was romantically involved for two years - not
the last famous woman to fall under the Frenchman's spell. Montand made his film debut
with a supporting part in the Piaf vehicle "Star Without Light" (1946), followed by his
first outing as a leading man in "Gates of the Night" (1946).
Inspired by Piaf's example, Montand sought to improve himself, refining his stage
persona, becoming well read, incorporating the poetry of Jacques Prévert into his act,
and forming his own jazz group. Montand married acclaimed actress Simone Signoret in
1951, and made his mark as an actor in Henri-Georges Clouzot's classic suspense thriller
"The Wages of Fear" (1953), which told of desperate men hired to transport trucks laden
with nitro glycerine over treacherous roads. Also notable were his performances in the
Italian drama "The Wide Blue Road" (1957) and in a French adaptation that same year of
Arthur Miller's play "The Crucible," starring opposite his wife in a reprise of the
stage version they had appeared in two years earlier. Montand's father was a dedicated
Communist, and Signoret and Montand were enthusiastic supporters of the leftist
political movement in France. However, following the Russian invasion of Hungary in
1956, Montand was criticized for going ahead with his planned tour of the Soviet Union.
While there, he and Signoret dined with Nikita Khrushchev and these actions temporarily
prevented them from receiving a Visa to the United States. While he expressed his
support and signed numerous petitions backing their cause, Montand stopped short,
however, of ever actually joining The Communist Party and disapproved of the Russians'
actions in Budapest.
During this time, Montand's singing career continued to thrive and despite speaking
little English, he mounted two highly successful Broadway runs of the one-man show "An
Evening with Yves Montand" in 1959 and 1961. The performance included various songs and
he occasionally spoke in French, Italian or Spanish, but relied mostly on pantomime and
charm to communicate with English speakers in the audience. Montand came off so well on
stage that 20th Century Fox tapped him to star opposite none other than Marilyn Monroe
in "Let's Make Love" (1960), a part already turned down by top leading men like Charlton
Heston, Cary Grant and Gregory Peck. Montand recited his lines phonetically and
displayed little chemistry with Monroe onscreen, but that was apparently not the case in
real life as they had a torrid extramarital affair during shooting that was mostly
public knowledge at the time, but received even more ink later on following Signoret's
confirmation of it in her 1975 autobiography. "Yves Montand on Broadway" (ABC, 1961) was
a network TV edition of the live show, and Montand appeared in three additional
Hollywood features, "Sanctuary" (1961), as a Cajun bootlegger, "Goodbye Again" (1961),
and the Shirley MacLaine romantic comedy vehicle "My Geisha" (1962), during which he
allegedly had a second co-star affair with MacLaine. That year, Montand also had the dis
tinction of starring in the first television program that was broadcast from Europe to
America via the new Telstar satellite.
Leaving singing aside for a few years, Montand concentrated on movies and other notable
assignments during this period that included his turn as a champion race car driver in
John Frankenheimer's big-budget epic "Grand Prix" (1966) and the all-star World War II
drama "Paris is Burning" (1966). Montand garnered the highest acclaim he had yet to
receive as an actor for the Costa-Gavras films "Z" (1969), "The Confession" (1970), and
"State of Siege" (1973), overtly political, widely praised pictures that helped elevate
the actor's status as a serious dramatic performer. During this period, Montand also
starred in the suave crime thriller "The Red Circle" (1970), opposite fellow French
superstar Alain Delon, and made his final American film appearance in "On a Clear Day
You Can See Forever" (1970), playing Barbra Streisand's psychiatrist in a rather
peculiar fantasy-musical-comedy-drama. Montand was still politically active for leftist
causes during this period, getting expelled from Spain in 1975 for drawing attention to
the plight of 11 Spanish prisoners scheduled for execution.
Montand resumed touring in 1981, playing many dates in France and several other
countries, as well as stops in New York (a week-long run at The Metropolitan Opera
marked him as the first singer to ever perform solo there), Washington, Los Angeles and
San Francisco. He made headlines in France in 1984 by disassociating himself from the
political left after three decades of support. 44 percent of the French electorate
expressed an interest in seeing Montand run for office; he never publicly ruled out the
possibility, but seemed content to be seen as a learned commentator. By this point,
Montand was considered passé as a leading man, but his profile was raised one last time
via his widely complimented performances as an elderly patriarch in Claude Berri's
elegant dramas "Jean De Florette" (1986) and "Manon of the Spring" (1986), which were
filmed back-to-back. Signoret died of cancer in 1985 during the production of those
films and Montand married his considerably younger personal assistant in 1987, fathering
his first son the following year at age 67. He died of a heart attack on Nov. 9, 1991 on
the final shooting day of the film "IP5: The Island of Pachyderms." Two years before the
actor's death, he was named in a paternity suit filed by actress Anne-Gilberte Drossard,
who claimed that Montand was the father of her daughter, born in 1975. He declined to
undergo a DNA test, but because he had not put this refusal in writing, the French court
ordered his body exhumed in 1998 to determine the validity of Drossard's assertion. Much
controversy ensued over the decision, given Montand's position as a French cultural
icon, and the subsequent genetic test failed to show a DNA match.
by John Charles (supplied by TCMdb)
Yves Montand Profile - Starring Yves Montand - 3/9
by John Charles | December 21, 2011
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