
Jeanne Moreau obituary in “The Guardian” in 2017.
With her sensual, pouting mouth, her Gauloises-saturated voice, and her combination of sharp intelligence and smouldering sexuality, Jeanne Moreau, who has died aged 89, seemed to many the embodiment of French womanhood. Although by the early 1950s she was established on stage, Moreau achieved screen stardom only with her 20th film, Louis Malle’s first solo feature, Lift to the Scaffold (1958), as an actor who represented the spirit of emerging feminism. Her status was consolidated in Malle’s The Lovers, released later the same year, and reached a peak as Moreau, queen of the French New Wave, took the role of Catherine, object of the affections of the best friends of the title in François Truffaut’s Jules et Jim (1961).

According to the critic Derek Malcolm: “Moreau was the perfect choice for Catherine: she gives a performance full of gaiety and charm without conveying an empty-headed bimbo. She makes the watcher understand that this is no ordinary woman whom both men adore. It is possibly the most complete portrait of any feminine character in the entire oeuvre of the New Wave.”
Although Moreau seemed the archetypical French woman, she was half English; her mother, Kathleen Buckley, was a Lancashire lass, from Oldham. Kathleen was one of the high-stepping Tiller Girls, and it was while she was performing at the Folies Bergère in Paris that she met Anatole Moreau, a cafe owner. Kathleen became pregnant, they married, and their daughter Jeanne was born in Montmartre.Advertisement
“I’m very proud of being half English and I think as time passes my best English qualities are more and more visible,” remarked Moreau. “I’m pleased I can be outrageous as only the English can be.” If being outrageous meant being her own woman, expressing her opinions unreservedly and having a number of well-publicised affairs, then she lived up to the epithet.
At first she wanted to be a dancer like her mother, but a visit to the Comédie-Française to see Marie Bell as Phèdre changed all that. “That was passion. Being in the audience I felt, even the first time, that my place wasn’t there in the dark. I didn’t feel like being the one who just watches. I wasn’t born for obscurity. I knew at once I wanted to be an actress. It was not a money or a fame thing but an escape from real life. I lost all interest in school.”
When Jeanne told her father of her ambition, he called her a whore, but her mother supported her, and she entered the Conservatoire National Supérieur d’Art Dramatique at the age of 18. (Jeanne’s father became reconciled to his daughter’s profession only a few years before he died in 1975.)
In her final year at the Conservatoire, Moreau was approached by Jean Vilar, who was organising the first Avignon theatre festival, to play Verochka in A Month in the Country. As a result of this performance, she was given a four-year contract at the Comédie-Française. A fellow member of the company was the actor-director-screenwriter Jean-Louis Richard, whom she married in 1948, a few months before their son Jérome was born. Two years later, the couple separated, although Richard subsequently directed her in two films: Mata Hari, Agent H21 (1965) and Diane’s Body (1969).
After leaving the Comédie-Française in 1952, she rejoined Vilar at the Théâtre National Populaire, playing opposite the matinee idol Gérard Philipe in Le Cid and The Prince of Homburg. (She would later co-star with him in Roger Vadim’s 1959 updated film version of Les Liaisons Dangereuses.)
Other stage triumphs were as the Sphinx in Jean Cocteau’s La Machine Infernale, with Jean Marais as Oedipus; Eliza Doolittle in Pygmalion, directed by Marais; and Maggie in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, directed by Peter Brook. It was in the last of these that she was seen by the 25-year-old tyro film director Malle, who was determined to star her in Lift to the Scaffold. Previously she had made so little impact, in superficial roles in a series of commercial pictures, excepting her call-girl dancer in Jacques Becker’s Touchez Pas au Grisbi (Honour Among Thieves, 1954), that many believed it to be her first.
Lift to the Scaffold was a vividly photographed, darkly atmospheric thriller in which Moreau glowed as a woman plotting with her lover to kill her husband. “We didn’t hide Jeanne’s face in cosmetics,” Malle explained, “but allowed her to be herself. After years of having makeup artists covering up her looks in a desperate attempt to force her to conform, suddenly she became a real woman.” According to Malle, they had “a great love affair”.
In The Lovers, Moreau was wonderful as the bored provincial wife finding sexual gratification outside marriage. But the nature of the controversial film, with its semi-nude love scenes, was one of the causes of the end of the affair. “Louis could no longer stand to see me as others then saw me, and as only he had seen me until then,” Moreau explained. “I knew that if I played the love scenes just as Louis wanted, he would love me as an actress but hate me as a woman. I could not play them without betraying him.”
However, they remained good friends for the rest of their lives, and Malle directed Moreau in two further films, Le Feu Follet (The Fire Within, 1963) and Viva Maria! (1965), the latter co-starring Brigitte Bardot.
In 1960, Moreau played another bored and frustrated wife in Brook’s Moderato Cantabile (Seven Days … Seven Nights), written by her friend Marguerite Duras, for which she won the best actress award at Cannes. She then refused the Jean Simmons role in Spartacus to work with Michelangelo Antonioni in La Notte (1961), but “there was no communication between Antonioni and me”. Nevertheless, she was effective as a woman facing the emptiness of her life as, in the best sequence, she wanders the streets of Milan for hours.
But it was Truffaut who dispelled the gloom, making Moreau smile again as the skittish Catherine in Jules et Jim. She not only sings Le Tourbillondelightfully, but also brilliantly captures the mood swings of this complex woman. One of the most memorable freewheeling sequences comes when Moreau as Catherine dresses up as a man whom she names Thomas, puts on a fake moustache, and races her two lovers across a bridge.
This was followed by an equally complex femme fatale role in Joseph Losey’s Eva (1962). She had begun a five-year relationship with the fashion designer Pierre Cardin, who designed many of her clothes on and off screen. Although he was gay, the couple were seen everywhere together and there was speculation that they would marry. Meanwhile, she continued to work with many of the world’s best directors. She was a compulsive gambler in Jacques Demy’s Bay of Angels (1962); a seductive Miss Burstner in her friend Orson Welles’s The Trial (1962); and was splendidly unscrupulous in Luis Buñuel’s Diary of a Chambermaid (1964), allowing her boots to be kissed by her foot-fetishist boss.
The critics also genuflected for her performances in the above films, though they were justifiably less laudatory about her roles in the few big commercial films she appeared in, such as Carl Foreman’s rambling war film The Victors (1963), John Frankenheimer’s The Train (1964), in which she is a widowed hotel owner who has a romantic tryst with a French resistance leader (Burt Lancaster) on the run from the Nazis, and The Yellow Rolls-Royce (1964) where, at Ascot, in a Cardin suit, she betrays her wealthy husband (Rex Harrison) in the eponymous vehicle with his underling (Edmund Purdom).
Then there were two bizarre flops, directed by Tony Richardson. Mademoiselle (1966), with a script by Jean Genet, had Moreau as a village schoolteacher who goes off at night setting fire to barns, and poisoning the water of the livestock. In one scene, which few other actresses could have got away with, she gets down on her knees, bays like a dog and licks the muddy boots of her lover, an Italian workman. In The Sailor from Gibraltar (1967), based on Duras, she played a mysterious woman, sailing the seas in her yacht in search of the sailor of the title. Also in the film, as a ditched wife, was Vanessa Redgrave, then married to Richardson. Life imitated art when Redgrave divorced Richardson, citing Moreau as co-respondent.



















Moreau worked with Welles again on four films, two of them, The Deep and The Other Side of the Wind, left unfinished. In Chimes at Midnight (1966), she was a lively Doll Tearsheet, and the fulfilment of a sailor’s dream in The Immortal Story (1968), almost convincing him (and us) that she was 17.Advertisement
In Truffaut’s Hitchcock-inspired The Bride Wore Black (1968), Moreau was supremely in command as a meticulous avenging angel, seducing and then eliminating all the men who shot her husband on her wedding day. For Jean Renoir, who described her as “probably the actress I admire most”, she provided a musical interlude between episodes of Le Petit Théâtre de Jean Renoir (1971), singing Quand L’Amour Meurt in a high, small but affecting voice.
In 1974, she returned to the stage, at the Espace Cardin in Paris, in Ride Across Lake Constance by Peter Handke, in a cast that included Gérard Depardieu and Delphine Seyrig. After a brief affair with the playwright, and films with Losey (Mr Klein, 1976) and Elia Kazan (The Last Tycoon, 1976), Moreau married the director William Friedkin in 1977. They had met a few years earlier when he was in France scouting locations for The French Connection. They lived in the US until their divorce two years later. “That marriage with Bill was an extraordinary experience, extremely painful and violent, but I’m happy I went through it,” Moreau said.Advertisement
She directed two well-made, but essentially old-fashioned films, Lumière (1976), about actors, and The Adolescent (1979), which drew on her late childhood during the occupation. In Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s last film, Querelle (1982), based on Genet, Moreau somehow managed to keep risibility at bay as the rapacious Madame Lysiane, owner of a brothel, who warbles the monotonous song Everybody Kills the Thing He Loves.
She appeared on British television: in Vicious Circle (1985, an adaptation of Jean-Paul Sartre’s Huis Clos), making an impact as the lesbian Ines; in The Clothes in the Wardrobe (1993), as a free-spirited woman bringing colour into a dull English family; and in A Foreign Field (also in 1993), as the old flame of a war veteran (Leo McKern). She also continued to bring her heady combination of passion and intelligence to bear on films from a new generation of French directors, such as Luc Besson’s Nikita (1990), in which she had a supporting role as an instructor at a government “killing school” who teaches the young secret service assassin (Anne Parillaud) to be “first a human being then a woman”.
Few screen actors could match Moreau in the longevity of her allure, demonstrated in The Old Lady Who Walks in the Sea (1991), in which she was a witty and lecherous con artist; in Cet Amour-Là (2001), in which she impersonated Duras; in François Ozon’s Time to Leave (Le Temps Qui Reste, 2005), as a sympathetic confidante to her dying gay grandson; and in Manoel de Oliveira’s Gebo and the Shadow (Gebo et L’Ombre, 2012), in which she delivered an amusing cameo.
“People – especially women – worry so much about ageing,” she said when she was in her 70s. “But I tell you, you look younger if you don’t worry about it. Because beyond the beauty, the sex, the titillation, the surface, there is a human being. And that has to emerge.”
Moreau is survived by her son.
• Jeanne Moreau, actor, born 23 January 1928; died 31 July 2017


























Jeanne Moreau (1928–2017) was the “High Priestess” of the French New Wave, a performer whose career redefined the possibilities of female screen acting. While her contemporaries like Brigitte Bardot represented a more overt, “sunny” sexuality, Moreau embodied a cerebral, restless, and fiercely independentwomanhood.
A critical analysis of her work reveals a performer who used “under-acting” as a weapon, creating a style characterized by a downturned mouth, a smoky voice, and a “bored” gaze that suggested a woman who had seen everything and was still waiting for something meaningful.
1. Career Arc: From the Comédie-Française to the Avant-Garde
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The Classical Foundation (1947–1957): Unlike many film stars, Moreau was a prodigy of the theater, becoming the youngest person ever to join the Comédie-Française. This rigorous training gave her a technical mastery of voice and posture that she would later “deconstruct” for the cinema.
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The New Wave Muse (1958–1965): Her collaboration with Louis Malle and François Truffautrevolutionized cinema. She became the face of the Nouvelle Vague, playing women who were intellectually superior to their lovers and refused to be bound by traditional morality.
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The International Auteur Phase (1966–1980s): Moreau became a global icon, sought after by the world’s greatest directors, including Orson Welles (who called her “the greatest actress in the world”), Luis Buñuel, and Michelangelo Antonioni.
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The Directorial and Elder Stateswoman Phase: She successfully moved into directing (Lumière) and continued to act well into her 80s, serving as a living link to the golden age of European art cinema.
2. Critical Analysis of Key Performances
Elevator to the Gallows (1958) – The Iconography of the Walk
As Florence Carala, a woman wandering the streets of Paris while waiting for her lover to commit a murder.
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Analysis: This film contains one of the most famous sequences in cinema history: Moreau walking down the Champs-Élysées at night, illuminated only by shop windows, to the improvised jazz score of Miles Davis.
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Critique: Critics point to this performance as the birth of cinematic naturalism. Moreau insisted on being filmed without heavy makeup and with natural lighting. Her face, caught in a cycle of hope and despair, became a “landscape.” She proved that a woman’s interior thoughts could be as cinematic as any action sequence.
Jules and Jim (1962) – The Enigma of Catherine
As the woman at the center of a decades-long love triangle.
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Analysis: Catherine is perhaps the most complex female character of the 1960s. She is impulsive, cruel, and joyous. Moreau utilized a “light-dark” duality, moving from childlike playfulness to suicidal melancholy with terrifying speed.
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Critique: Truffaut and Moreau created a character that defied the “Manic Pixie Dream Girl” trope decades before it existed. Critically, Moreau was praised for her vocal performance—her rendition of “Le Tourbillon de la vie” captures the film’s theme of the fleeting, circular nature of love. She didn’t play Catherine as a “prize” for the men, but as a force of nature that they could neither understand nor contain.
Seven Days… Seven Nights (Moderato Cantabile) (1960) – The Architecture of Boredom
As a frustrated wife obsessed with a murder she witnessed.
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Analysis: Working with Peter Brook and writer Marguerite Duras, Moreau delivered a masterclass in minimalism.
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Critique: She won Best Actress at Cannes for this role. Critics noted her ability to convey “desperate stillness.” She used her eyes to suggest a soul that was slowly suffocating under the weight of bourgeois life. It is a performance of omitted emotions, where what isn’t said is far more important than the dialogue.
3. Style and Legacy: The “Intellectual” Siren
Jeanne Moreau’s style was defined by a rejection of the “Ingenue” archetype.
| Attribute | Critical Impact |
| The “Moreau Mouth” | Her naturally downturned lips conveyed a sense of tragic wisdom or disdain, making her look perpetually “unimpressed.” |
| Vocal Texture | Her voice was low, raspy, and rhythmic; she treated dialogue like poetry, emphasizing the musicality of the French language. |
| The “Profound” Gaze | She was a master of the “long take,” able to hold the camera’s attention without moving a muscle, forcing the audience to look for meaning in her micro-expressions. |
The “Anti-Bardot”
Critically, Moreau is often contrasted with Brigitte Bardot. If Bardot was the “body” of French cinema, Moreau was its “soul” and “brain.” She broke the “virgin/whore” dichotomy of the 1950s by playing women who were sexually active, intellectually rigorous, and emotionally messy all at once.
Critical Note: Jeanne Moreau was the “First Modern Woman of Cinema.” She didn’t act for the male gaze; she acted for the camera as an equal collaborator with the director. Her legacy is the “European Art Film” acting style—unflinching, unsentimental, and deeply human. She proved that an actress could age with her face intact and her intellect as her primary weapon