Difference between revisions of "Sylvia Lacan"
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'''Sylvia Maklès Bataille''' was a [[French]] [[:Category:People|actress]], born on [[Timeline|November 1, 1908]] in [[Paris]] and died [[Timeline|December 23, 1993]] in [[Paris]]. | '''Sylvia Maklès Bataille''' was a [[French]] [[:Category:People|actress]], born on [[Timeline|November 1, 1908]] in [[Paris]] and died [[Timeline|December 23, 1993]] in [[Paris]]. | ||
− | She was the wife of [[Georges Bataille]], and then of [[Jacques Lacan]]. | + | She was the wife of [[Georges Bataille]], and then of [[Jacques Lacan]]. Her daughter from her first marriage with [[Georges Bataille]] was the psychoanalyst [[Laurence Bataille]] ([[Timeline|1930-1966]]). She had a second daughter, [[Judith]] (born in [[Timeline|1941]]) from her second marriage to [[psychoanalyst]] [[Jacques Lacan]]. |
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− | Her daughter from her first marriage with [[Georges Bataille]] was the psychoanalyst [[Laurence Bataille]] ([[Timeline|1930-1966]]). She had a second daughter, [[Judith]] (born in [[Timeline|1941]]) from her second marriage to [[psychoanalyst]] [[Jacques Lacan]]. | ||
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=====Film===== | =====Film===== | ||
Entering films in 1934, actress Sylvia Bataille quickly became a favorite leading lady of several top European directors. Her most celebrated appearance was as the melancholy heroine in Jean Renoir's fragmentary but brilliant ''Une Partie du Campagne'' (1936). She also registered well in Renoir's ''Crime de Monsieur Lange'', filmed the same year. Sylvia Bataille's last screen showing was as Madame LeCuyer in Marcel Carne's ''Portes de la Nuit'' (1946). | Entering films in 1934, actress Sylvia Bataille quickly became a favorite leading lady of several top European directors. Her most celebrated appearance was as the melancholy heroine in Jean Renoir's fragmentary but brilliant ''Une Partie du Campagne'' (1936). She also registered well in Renoir's ''Crime de Monsieur Lange'', filmed the same year. Sylvia Bataille's last screen showing was as Madame LeCuyer in Marcel Carne's ''Portes de la Nuit'' (1946). | ||
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* [http://movies.yahoo.com/movie/1800051763/info The Le Crime de Monsieur Lange] (1936) | * [http://movies.yahoo.com/movie/1800051763/info The Le Crime de Monsieur Lange] (1936) | ||
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+ | == Filmographie == | ||
+ | {{liste acteurs}} | ||
+ | * ''[[Le Roman de Renard (1930)|Le Roman de Renard]]'' (1930) de [[Wladyslaw Starewicz|Ladislav Starévitch]] | ||
+ | * ''[[La Voix sans visage]]'' (1933) | ||
+ | * ''[[Adémaï aviateur]]'' (1933) de [[Jean Tarride]] | ||
+ | * ''[[Por un perro chico, una mujer]]'' (1934) | ||
+ | * ''[[Son excellence Antonin]]'' (1935) | ||
+ | * ''[[Partie de campagne]]'' (1936) de [[Jean Renoir]] | ||
+ | * ''[[Topaze (film,1936)|Topaze]]'' (1936) de [[Marcel Pagnol]] | ||
+ | * ''[[Rose (1936)|Rose]]'' (1936) | ||
+ | * ''[[Œil de lynx, détective]]'' (1936) | ||
+ | * ''[[Jenny]]'' (1936) de [[Marcel Carné]] | ||
+ | * ''[[Le Crime de Monsieur Lange]]'' (1936) de [[Jean Renoir]] | ||
+ | * ''[[Vous n'avez rien à déclarer ?]]'' (1937) | ||
+ | * ''[[Cargaison blanche (1937)|Cargaison blanche]]'' (1937) de [[Richard Siodmak]] | ||
+ | * ''[[L'Affaire du courrier de Lyon (1937)|L'Affaire du courrier de Lyon]]'' (1937) de [[Maurice Lehmann]] et [[Claude Autant-Lara]] | ||
+ | * ''[[Forfaiture (1937)|Forfaiture]]'' (1937) de [[Marcel L'Herbier]] | ||
+ | * ''[[Frères corses]]'' (1938) | ||
+ | * ''[[Les Gens du voyage (film, 1938)|Les Gens du voyage]]'' (1938) | ||
+ | * ''[[Le Château des quatre obèses]]'' (1939) | ||
+ | * ''[[Serge Panine]]'' (1939) | ||
+ | * ''[[L'Étrange nuit de Noël]]'' (1939) | ||
+ | * ''[[Quartier latin (1939)|Quartier latin]]'' (1939) de [[Pierre Colombier]] | ||
+ | * ''[[Le Collier de chanvre]]'' (1940) | ||
+ | * ''[[Campement 13]]'' (1940) | ||
+ | * ''[[L'Enfer des anges (film, 1941)|L'Enfer des anges]]'' (1941) | ||
+ | * ''[[Ils étaient cinq permissionnaires]]'' (1945) | ||
+ | * ''[[Les Portes de la nuit]]'' (1946) de [[Marcel Carné]] | ||
+ | * ''[[L'Amore]]'' (1948) | ||
+ | * ''[[Aller et retour]]'' (1948), également intitulé ''Ulysse ou Les mauvaises rencontres'' | ||
+ | * ''[[Julie de Carneilhan (1949)|Julie de Carneilhan]]'' (1949) | ||
+ | --> | ||
[[Category:Jacques Lacan]] | [[Category:Jacques Lacan]] | ||
[[Category:People]] | [[Category:People]] | ||
+ | <!-- | ||
+ | http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0060663/ | ||
+ | http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0060663/bio | ||
+ | http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sylvia_Bataille | ||
+ | http://movies2.nytimes.com/gst/movies/filmography.html?p_id=4503 | ||
+ | http://www.rottentomatoes.com/p/sylvia_bataille/ | ||
Une partie de campagne (A day in the country) | Une partie de campagne (A day in the country) | ||
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Sylvia Bataille, Georges Darnoux | Sylvia Bataille, Georges Darnoux | ||
French with English subtitles | French with English subtitles | ||
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Revision as of 01:09, 23 June 2007
Sylvia Maklès Bataille was a French actress, born on November 1, 1908 in Paris and died December 23, 1993 in Paris.
She was the wife of Georges Bataille, and then of Jacques Lacan. Her daughter from her first marriage with Georges Bataille was the psychoanalyst Laurence Bataille (1930-1966). She had a second daughter, Judith (born in 1941) from her second marriage to psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan.
Timeline
- Date of Birth
- 1 November 1908, Paris, Ile-de-France, France
- In 1938, Lacan starts a relationship with Sylvia Maklès-Bataille, who has separated from Georges Bataille in 1934.
- On July 3, 1941, Judith Lacan, the daughter of Lacan and Sylvia Maklès-Bataille, is born. Judith receives the surname Bataille because Lacan is still married to Marie-Louise.
- On August 9, 1946, Sylvia Maklès and Georges Bataille are officially divorced.
- In 1953, Sylvia marries Jacques Lacan.
- Date of Death
- 22 December 1993, Paris, Ile-de-France, France. (heart attack)
Film
Entering films in 1934, actress Sylvia Bataille quickly became a favorite leading lady of several top European directors. Her most celebrated appearance was as the melancholy heroine in Jean Renoir's fragmentary but brilliant Une Partie du Campagne (1936). She also registered well in Renoir's Crime de Monsieur Lange, filmed the same year. Sylvia Bataille's last screen showing was as Madame LeCuyer in Marcel Carne's Portes de la Nuit (1946).
- A Day in the Country (1936)
- The Le Crime de Monsieur Lange (1936)