Monique Mercure, 1977 Palme d'Or Winner, Dies at 89
She was not on the list.
The Canadian actress also starred in Robert Altman's
'Quintet,' David Cronenberg's 'Naked Lunch' and Claude Chabrol's 'The Blood of
Others' over a 60-year career.
Monique Mercure, the Canadian actress who earned a Palme
d'Or in 1977 for J.A. Martin photographer, has died. She was 89.
Simon Brault, director and CEO of the Canada Council for the
Arts, said on his Facebook page that Mercure died Saturday night at St.
Raphael's House in Montreal, where she had been in palliative care following a
battle with cancer.
"I just lost the one I've always been in contact with
for 29 years. We were bound by an active friendship that only death could
stop," Brault wrote. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau paid tribute
to Mercure, a veteran of more than 100 film, TV and stage appearances over a
six-decade career.
"We've lost a great Canadian actress. Monique Mercure
has had a profound impact on generations of Canadians. She helped promote
Quebec cinema beyond our borders and her legacy will live on through her work.
My thoughts are with her loved ones today," Trudeau said on his Twitter
account.
Born on Nov. 14, 1930, as Marie Lise Monique Emond in
Montreal, Mercure initially studied music in Montreal and married the composer
Pierre Mercure in 1949. They had three children together before separating in
1958.
Mercure moved to Paris to study acting at l’École
Jacques-Lecoq in Paris, before returning to Montreal, where she had further training
at the Actor's Studio. Mercure went on to star in more than 30 French and
English-language movies, including Claude Jutra’s Mon oncle Antoine and Jean
Beaudin’s J.A. Martin photographe, which also earned her a Canadian Film Award
in 1977.
She starred in David Cronenberg's Naked Lunch, Robert
Altman's Quintet, Claude Chabrol's The Blood of Others, Piers Haggard's
Conquest and François Gerard's The Red Violin, which also starred Samuel L.
Jackson.
Mercure was also a veteran of the stage, with theater
credits including Michel Tremblay's Les belles-soeurs and Bertolt Brecht’s The
Threepenny Opera. She led Montreal's National Theater School as director from
1991-2000.
Mercure was made an Officer and then a Companion of the
Order of Canada and in 2006 became a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada.
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