Sylvia Bataille
Sylvia Bataille | |
---|---|
Born | Sylvia Maklès 1 November 1908 Paris, France |
Died | 23 December 1993 Paris, France | (aged 85)
Years active | 1933–1950 |
Spouse(s) | Georges Bataille
(m. 1928; div. 1946)Jacques Lacan
(m. 1953; died 1981) |
Sylvia Bataille (born Sylvia Maklès; 1 November 1908 – 23 December 1993) was a French actress of Romanian-Jewish descent.[1] When she was twenty, she married the writer Georges Bataille with whom she had a daughter, the psychoanalyst Laurence Bataille (1930–1986).[2] Georges Bataille and Sylvia separated in 1934 but did not divorce until 1946. Starting in 1938, she was a companion of the psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan with whom, in 1941, she had a daughter, Judith (married name Judith Miller). Sylvia Bataille married Jacques Lacan in 1953.
A pupil of Charles Dullin, Bataille's theatrical debut was with the agit-prop troupe , directed by Jacques Prévert. Her film debut came in 1933, and in 1936 she played her most memorable role in Partie de campagne (A Day in the Country) directed by Jean Renoir. Her final appearance was in 1950.
Filmography[]
- 1930: The Tale of the Fox animated, feature film by Ladislas Starevitch, voice of Rabbit
- 1930: , short film by
- 1933: The Faceless Voice by
- 1934: (Un chien qui raccroche), short film by - Santiago Ontañón
- 1934: by Jean Tarride
- 1935: by Charles-Félix Tavano
- 1936: Topaze by Marcel Pagnol
- 1936: by Raymond Rouleau
- 1936: Partie de campagne by Jean Renoir
- 1936: by Pierre-Jean Ducis
- 1936: The Crime of Monsieur Lange by Jean Renoir
- 1936: Jenny by Marcel Carné
- 1937: by Léo Joannon
- 1937: (short film) by Yves Allégret
- 1937: The Courier of Lyon by Maurice Lehmann and Claude Autant-Lara
- 1937: Forfaiture (released as The Cheat in English) by Marcel L'Herbier
- 1937: White Cargo by Robert Siodmak
- 1938: by
- 1938: People Who Travel (Les Gens du voyage in French) by Jacques Feyder
- 1939: by Yvan Noé
- 1939: Serge Panine by Charles Méré
- 1939: by Yvan Noé
- 1939: Latin Quarter by Pierre Colombier
- 1940: Hangman's Noose by Léon Mathot
- 1940: Camp Thirteen by
- 1941: by Christian-Jaque
- 1945: by Pierre Caron
- 1946: Gates of the Night by Marcel Carné
- 1948: , short film (also known as Aller et retour) by Alexandre Astruc
- 1948: L'Amore, anthology film by Roberto Rossellini
- 1950: Julie de Carneilhan by Jacques Manuel
Notes[]
- ^ Michel Surya (2002) Georges Bataille: an intellectual biography, page 147
- ^ Roudinesco, Élisabeth; Plon, Michel; et al. (2004). Wörterbuch der Psychoanalyse: Namen, Länder, Werke, Begriffe. Austria: Springer. p. 588. ISBN 978-3-211-83748-1.
Sie war die Mutter einer kleinen Tochter, Laurence Bataille (1930–1986)...
Bibliography[]
- Hunt, Jamer Kennedy (1995). "Absence to presence: The life history of Sylvia Bataille Lacan (France)". Rice University Electronic Theses and Dissertations.
- "Sylvia Bataille". Cinémathèque française. Retrieved 2009-08-03.
External links[]
- French film actresses
- Actresses from Paris
- French people of Romanian-Jewish descent
- Jewish French actresses
- 1908 births
- 1993 deaths
- 20th-century French actresses