Emmanuelle Riva, Oscar-Nominated Star of 'Amour,' Dies at 89
She was not on the list.
Riva died Friday afternoon in a Paris clinic after a long
illness, according to her agent.
Emmanuelle Riva, a French star of screen and stage who was
nominated for an Academy Award for best actress in 2013, has died. She was 89.
Riva died Friday afternoon in a Paris clinic after a long
illness, her agent, Anne Alvares Correa, told the Associated Press.
Riva was Oscar-nominated for her role in Amour, Michael Haneke's brutal depiction of an aging
couple.
With Riva starring alongside another French movie legend,
Jean-Louis Trintignant, the film won the Academy Award for best
foreign-language film. They played a loving, elderly Parisian couple, one of
whom has a stroke.
Amour also won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival.
Riva also won best actress at the British Academy Film Awards for her
performance. But Jennifer Lawrence won the Oscar for best actress that year, as
a young widower in Silver Linings Playbook.
In her 60-year career, Riva made an early splash in
filmmaker Alain Resnais' acclaimed Hiroshima Mon Amour in 1959.
She worked into last year, shooting in Iceland for Alma,
which is still being filmed and edited and will be the last movie to feature
Riva, said Correa.
The actress also will appear on the big screen in Paris
Pieds Nus (Paris Barefoot), which is set to be released in France in March.
Paying tribute, French President Francois Hollande said in a
statement that Riva "deeply marked French cinema" and "created
intense emotion in all the roles she played."
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