Birthday:
Birthday:

Abel Gance was a French film director, producer, writer and actor. A pioneer in the theory and practice of montage, he is best known for three major silent films: J'accuse (1919), La Roue (1923), and Napoléon (1927). He was born in Paris in 1889. In 1909, he acted in his first film. He also wrote scenarios, and often sold them to Gaumont. During this period he was diagnosed with tuberculosis, fatal at the time, but he recovered. In 1911, with some friends he established a production company, Le Film Français, and began directing his own films. With the outbreak of WW I, rejected by the army on medical grounds, he started writing and directing for a new film company, Film d'Art until 1918, making over a dozen successful films. Charles Pathé underwrote his next film, J'accuse (1919), in which Gance confronted the waste and suffering which the war had brought. In 1920, he developed La Roue. He brought an unprecedented level of energy and imagination to the technical realization of his story, employing elaborate editing techniques and innovative use of rapid cutting which made the film highly influential. The finished film ran for nearly nine hours, but was edited down for distribution. In 1921, Gance visited America to promote J'accuse. He met D. W. Griffith, whom he had long admired. He was also offered a contract with MGM but turned it down. He then embarked on his greatest project, a six-part life of Napoléon. Only the first part was completed, tracing his early life, through the Revolution, up to the invasion of Italy, but even this occupied a vast canvas with meticulously recreated historical scenes and scores of characters. The film was full of experimental techniques, combining rapid cutting, hand-held cameras, superimposition of images, and, in wide-screen sequences, shot using a system he called Polyvision needing triple cameras (and projectors), achieved a spectacular panoramic effect, including a finale in which the outer two film panels were tinted blue and red, creating a widescreen image of a French flag. The original version ran for around 6 hours. A shortened version received a triumphant première at the Paris Opéra in April 1927. Throughout his life he kept returning to Napoléon, editing his footage, and as a result the original 1927 film was lost from view for decades. The dedicated work of the film historian Kevin Brownlow produced a five-hour version, still incomplete but fuller than anyone had seen since the 1920s. It was presented at the Telluride Film Festival in 1979, and the occasion brought a belated triumph to Gance's career, and made his name known to a worldwide audience. In the assessment of Kevin Brownlow, "...[Abel Gance] made a fuller use of the medium than anyone before or since". As well as his multiscreen ventures with Polyvision, he explored the use of superimposition of images, extreme close-ups, fast rhythmic editing, and he made the camera mobile in unorthodox ways – hand-held, mounted on wires or a pendulum, or even strapped to a horse. He also made early experiments with the addition of sound to film, and with filming in color and in 3-D. There were few aspects of film technique that he did not seek to incorporate in his work, and his influence was acknowledged by contemporaries and later by the French New Wave film-makers.
Birthday: October 25, 1889
Death: November 10, 1981

January 23, 1931

January 10, 1927

October 27, 1939

December 20, 1935

June 19, 1943

November 22, 1935

February 17, 1923

April 25, 1919

June 17, 1960

March 18, 1955

January 23, 1938

April 13, 1917

October 22, 1964

January 01, 1915

January 01, 1916

January 01, 1916

January 01, 1928

January 01, 1915

January 01, 1914

May 01, 1915

January 01, 1911

December 09, 1910

June 17, 1924

January 01, 1915

March 06, 1917

September 10, 1910

January 15, 1937

January 06, 1933

September 14, 1941

November 01, 1918

January 05, 1917

November 02, 1934

April 16, 1939

November 25, 1954
![I Accuse! [Magirama]](https://image.tmdb.org/t/p/w780/2y24WeSm8cHVYy8hrW5tIvmmCKo.jpg)
March 01, 1956

February 21, 1935

November 30, 1933

March 30, 1938

November 24, 1972

July 15, 1910

November 05, 1935

May 24, 1912

July 27, 1934

October 12, 1917

September 01, 1916

May 17, 1912

April 21, 1958

November 07, 1929

January 02, 1923

July 15, 1954

December 03, 1909

December 31, 1930

October 14, 1923

October 04, 1928

January 01, 1963

January 01, 1968

March 26, 1984

January 01, 1928