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Delphine Seyrig

Delphine Seyrig

Birthday: 10 April 1932, Beirut, French Mandate of Syria and Lebanon [now Lebanon]
Birth Name: Delphine Claire Belriane Seyrig
Height: 170 cm

Delphine was born in Beirut on the 10th April 1932 into an intellectual Protestant family. Her Alsatian father, Henri Seyrig, was the director of the Archaeological Institute and later France's c ...Show More

Delphine Seyrig
American actors work out their characters really thoroughly. They leave nothing to chance. When they Show more American actors work out their characters really thoroughly. They leave nothing to chance. When they do it, it is because they are certain of achieving a certain result. Take Jack Lemmon and Tony Curtis in [Billy] Wilder's Some Like it Hot, for instance. Their improvisation bursts out every inch of the way, but at the same time, how those characters are constructed! They hang together without a flaw. The actors can do the most incredible things because they have a solid base to build on. They can even amuse themselves by creating gags to amuse us. When French actors play the fool, it doesn't work out. Sometimes it's charming, more often self-indulging. When Americans do it, it's impeccable. Hide
[on Dirk Bogarde] That English Bogey: ah, what a wonderful actor and partner he is. [on Dirk Bogarde] That English Bogey: ah, what a wonderful actor and partner he is.
[on Alain Resnais] He never tells you 'I want'. I never once heard him say I want this or I want tha Show more [on Alain Resnais] He never tells you 'I want'. I never once heard him say I want this or I want that. When he chooses an actor he knows why he is choosing him. His casts are all very carefully considered. All his 'I wants' go into this preliminary section, and because of this the actors enjoy great freedom of action- cohesion being inevitable, you see? When you have a scene to play, you can try it gay or sad, whichever you like. Resnais will always say 'Do what you like, provided is how you feel the character'. But if he isn't pleased with the take, you go on and on until it's right, changing your approach if you like. This way he sometimes gets takes which are completely different. Hide
The theater and films are very far from women's consciousness about themselves. The theater and films are very far from women's consciousness about themselves.
[on the title character in Jeanne Dielman, 23, quai du commerce, 1080 Bruxelles (1975)] Her sex life Show more [on the title character in Jeanne Dielman, 23, quai du commerce, 1080 Bruxelles (1975)] Her sex life is very much like any housewife's. Hide
[on starring in the stage play of 'The Bitter Tears of Petra Von Kant'] Passion is a subject people Show more [on starring in the stage play of 'The Bitter Tears of Petra Von Kant'] Passion is a subject people don't dare speak of in a completely direct way now. Authors are afraid of talking about it. Hide
[on the Actors' Studio] It was an essential training for me. I lived in a milieu of painters and poe Show more [on the Actors' Studio] It was an essential training for me. I lived in a milieu of painters and poets that led me to act in Robert Frank's first film, "Pull My Daisy", in 1959, and which was screened in the same program as Shadows (1959). Hide
[on working with female directors] It's odd. In one year I made three films with women. Somehow we m Show more [on working with female directors] It's odd. In one year I made three films with women. Somehow we must sense each other. Hide
[on Marguerite Duras] Marguerite is not a woman. She is a person with characteristics which may be f Show more [on Marguerite Duras] Marguerite is not a woman. She is a person with characteristics which may be feminine. Hide
Words are icebergs. You only see the little tip which sticks out of the sea. But under the water... Show more Words are icebergs. You only see the little tip which sticks out of the sea. But under the water... there is all the rest. My way of working corresponds to this way of thinking. I work by reflex. I don't rack my brains... except when I don't understand. If a character does something and I can't see why, then I must try to find some justification. I try to make the character's development logical, even if it means going off into fantasy. If a director tells me nothing about a character, I invent all sorts of things about her for myself, just for my own use. I envelop her, try to identify her personality so as to be able to live it later. Hide
[on Luis Buñuel] With Buñuel one is more likely to go into raptures over his ideas and antitheses Show more [on Luis Buñuel] With Buñuel one is more likely to go into raptures over his ideas and antitheses than over his compositions. We were just talking about an Alain Resnais tracking shot, but it would be difficult to know what camera movement to talk about in a Buñuel film. And if you did speak about one, it wouldn't be for the movement itself but for the weight thrown into the balance by the meaning it expresses. With Buñuel one is involved by the idea rather than by the visual expression of the idea. Hide
[on becoming a director] Video is my independence from men. It's my feminist thing. I can express th Show more [on becoming a director] Video is my independence from men. It's my feminist thing. I can express things with video that I can't with films or plays. I like being able to fiddle with the camera, and the whole editing process. Hide
[on being directed by Samuel Beckett in a stage production of "Play"] It's still quite different to Show more [on being directed by Samuel Beckett in a stage production of "Play"] It's still quite different to be dealing with Beckett as an author who has precise ideas about the way he wishes to be interpreted and to be dealing with that author as a director; we were alone with him. It's both overwhelming and reassuring to be alone with the author-director. Hide
I had always been in rage. I had been very angry since childhood. But what man would want an angry w Show more I had always been in rage. I had been very angry since childhood. But what man would want an angry woman? The rage came out as charm. Hide
[on Jeanne Dielman, 23, quai du commerce, 1080 Bruxelles (1975)] It observes the woman in a loving a Show more [on Jeanne Dielman, 23, quai du commerce, 1080 Bruxelles (1975)] It observes the woman in a loving and generous way, doing the things she has to do every day- the way she cooks, the way she stands over a sink. It has turned out to be quite unbearable to watch. Nobody has really had to watch 3½ hours of housewife-ing before. It is a very important film. We went very far with the details of the character. I hate to feel ugly, and I did feel ugly. She was so trapped, it was like being in jail. Hide
[on her approach to characters] I have to create an entire past history for her/me. If one isn't pro Show more [on her approach to characters] I have to create an entire past history for her/me. If one isn't provided, I create it for myself. I invent it. I can't work any other way. The act of moving a cigarette lighter in itself doesn't interest me; what interests me is how to move it as the character would. I think the real reason why one loves acting lies in this conception of the gesture bound by personality. I think that even actors who don't admit it actually play much more than the text and its necessary movements. They act because they invent a character. And when one invents a character, he doesn't invent her at thirty-five or seventy years old; one makes her arrive there. Actors who deny it deny it because they're unaware of it, but they do it unconsciously. I don't care if they say the opposite. I know it isn't true. Hide
[on Beckettian theatre] Sam doesn't try to explain what the play means- the invisible part of the pl Show more [on Beckettian theatre] Sam doesn't try to explain what the play means- the invisible part of the play. He says you have to do that and that, you have to do it with your body, your voice, your lips. Hide
I think all women are feminists from the day they are born. But we each have different ways of survi Show more I think all women are feminists from the day they are born. But we each have different ways of surviving. Women are deeply insecure. Saying you're not a feminist doesn't mean you aren't one. You may be afraid to saying so because you're afraid of losing ground. I have a heavy past, having been an actress. It was a way of seducing, or proving to myself that I could be accepted. But actresses are a commercial product. They represent the whole male-female product seen with a microscope. They are agents of the male optic. Hide
[on working with William Klein on Mr. Freedom (1968)] I know his mind, the way he functions. I could Show more [on working with William Klein on Mr. Freedom (1968)] I know his mind, the way he functions. I couldn't have played the role for anyone else. With him I joked and had a lot of fun: he is like a brother to me. Usually I am afraid of my directors. But Bill impresses me by what he does, not as a person. I have known him so long we can say what we like about each other, and with him I was able to do things I might have never dared to try with other directors. Which proves that an actor can do anything provided he feels the context is right. For "Mr.Freedom" I did not construct a life for my character in my head. I did not create my private film. Klein was my film, my life. My friendship with Bill enabled to see myself in a new light. No one else ever offered me a role like that. Only Bill. Hide
In the case of [Samuel] Beckett and [Marguerite] Duras, writing is really staging within oneself, an Show more In the case of [Samuel] Beckett and [Marguerite] Duras, writing is really staging within oneself, and then comes in the imagery. In the context of my work with Sam Beckett, I was strongly affected: I didn't achieve everything I would have wished; I don't have the feeling of having reached the outer limit of everything he might have expected of me. That gives me the feeling of wanting to try again and to do better next time. [1986 interview] Hide
Women who refuse the whole concept of femininity are lucid much earlier, but they suffer more. Many Show more Women who refuse the whole concept of femininity are lucid much earlier, but they suffer more. Many women strive for femininity as a way of getting by. There are lots of things I wouldn't do any more. Hide
[on her acting profession] I can't give it up. It's the way I earn my living. All I can do is to try Show more [on her acting profession] I can't give it up. It's the way I earn my living. All I can do is to try to get my personal points across. Hide
[on Chantal Akerman] Chantal is of her time. While other filmmakers do 19th century filmmaking most Show more [on Chantal Akerman] Chantal is of her time. While other filmmakers do 19th century filmmaking most of the time, hers is 20th century filmmaking. That's why I think she's important. She, Ulrike Ottinger and Marguerite Duras are really the people who are making movies modern. Hide
[on playing Beckettian roles] I played "Comédie" in 1964 and "Pas" in 1978; "Comédie, it seems to Show more [on playing Beckettian roles] I played "Comédie" in 1964 and "Pas" in 1978; "Comédie, it seems to me was an easier play to do, and the text less remote than "Pas", easier to understand. At one and the same time there are all the elements of the most classic and the most casual theater, as if put through a food mill by Beckett. "Pas" is a piece which seems to me more difficult to play, perhaps because there's one person on stage and one person in the wings. Likely, musicians would find it difficult to play a sonata in a concert where the violinist would be on stage and the pianist in the wings or vice versa. Whatever the reason, I feel I lacked confidence in "Pas". There is real virtuosity in Beckett's texts and I am no virtuoso. I was never able to summon the right precision for the role. It was almost as the instrument itself were insufficient. To play Beckett you have to have a real capacity for precision in delivery. You have to know how to talk and to act mechanically and precisely as if for a Bach partita. Enough talk of being supple and inventing all that you will from within. As for me, I have a fluid, undefined, imprecise elocution, which isn't exactly bothersome in playing Turgenev, but which is troublesome in Beckett. Hide
We live in a so-called heterosexual society which is really male heterosexual. Power, press, media, Show more We live in a so-called heterosexual society which is really male heterosexual. Power, press, media, industry all stress male achievements. Heterosexuality was a mask. In the commercial cinema, this heterosexuality appears basically anti-feminine: you see more male faces on the posters than before. The world is showing its true face at last. Hide
[on Samuel Beckett] He is like an orchestra conductor: he sets the tempo. Actors, it seems to me, ar Show more [on Samuel Beckett] He is like an orchestra conductor: he sets the tempo. Actors, it seems to me, are ever less inclined, or no longer inclined at all, to respect rhythms, and French actors no longer take into account the metrical structure as they used to. When you work with Beckett, you find yourself regretting not having this almost musical education. It's a concrete, real kind of work that is quite distinct from the question of interpretation. Hide
[on the male and female position] The weird thing is that I don't think men know they are manipulati Show more [on the male and female position] The weird thing is that I don't think men know they are manipulating. Nothing can be expected of men unless women start to become aware of the manipulation which men do to them. Once a woman becomes aware, the solution doesn't come either, but at least the struggle begins. A little oxygen is getting in. Hide
Delphine Seyrig's FILMOGRAPHY
as Actor (16)
Delphine Seyrig Delphine Seyrig'S roles
Countess Elizabeth Bathory
Countess Elizabeth Bathory

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Colette
Colette

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