Marie Trintignant

Actress

Birthday January 21, 1962

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace Boulogne-Billancourt, France

DEATH DATE 2003-8-1, Neuilly-sur-Seine, France (41 years old)

Nationality France

#31360 Most Popular

1962

Marie Trintignant (21 January 1962 – 1 August 2003) was a French film and stage actress.

She appeared in over 30 movies during her 36-year career.

Her family was deeply involved in France's film industry, as her father was an actor and her mother was a director, producer, and screenwriter.

1976

Her parents divorced in 1976.

Throughout her early life, she was afflicted by severe shyness, but by her mid-teens, she decided to commit to acting.

She had a strong affection for animals and considered becoming a veterinarian, but in the end pursued a career in acting.

She first appeared on screen aged four in My Love, My Love, which was directed by her mother and starred her father.

Trintignant's first film to generate significant critical acclaim was Série noire, in which she starred alongside Patrick Dewaere.

1988

In 1988, Trintignant worked under French director Claude Chabrol in the film Une Affaire de Femmes, in which she played a young prostitute in wartime Vichy France.

Of the role and Chabrol's impact on her career, Trintignant later reflected, "Until then, I had always felt that I was a fraud if I did not go to extremes in showing my characters' pain, but he taught me lightness. He showed me how to grow without false tragedy."

1990

In 1990, Trintignant was involved in a serious car accident which she narrowly survived.

1991

She worked with Chabrol again in 1991 on the film Betty, an adaptation of a book by Georges Simenon.

The accident hardly impacted the pace of her career, and she starred in 21 films afterwards, including Les Amants du Pont-Neuf in 1991 and Wild Target in 1993, starring alongside Jean Rochefort and Guillaume Depardieu.

1995

She starred opposite her then-husband François Cluzet in the 1995 film The Apprentices, and in 1998, she appeared again with Depardieu in White Lies.

Two of Trintignant's films were released posthumously: Janis et John, a biographical film directed by her estranged husband Samuel Benchetrit, in which Trintignant starred as Janis Joplin, and Colette, une femme libre, a biographical miniseries in which Trintignant played the lead role of French novelist Colette.

Trintignant stated that she enjoyed portraying marginalized women and tragic heroes on film; she enjoyed playing characters who allowed her to speak "for those who don't deserve being spoken for."

She performed in both comedies and tragedies.

Trintignant was the mother of four sons:

2003

In 2003, Trintignant began an affair with Bertrand Cantat, the lead singer of French rock band Noir Désir.

That same year, Cantat, Trintignant, and Trintignant's mother traveled to Lithuania so Trintignant and her mother could finish work on a television movie.

On 26 July 2003, while in their shared hotel room, Cantat flew into a jealous rage during an argument over a text message sent to Trintignant by her husband, from whom she was separated; Cantat proceeded to beat Trintignant severely about the head and face.

She died days later from cerebral edema brought about by her injuries.

Cantat was convicted of "murder with indirect intent" in her death and received an eight-year prison sentence, of which he served four before his early release.

Trintignant's case became a cause célèbre in the discussion of domestic violence and leniency towards perpetrators.

Trintignant was born in Boulogne-Billancourt, the daughter of actor Jean-Louis Trintignant and his second wife, French film director, producer, and screenwriter Nadine Marquand.

When Marie's baby sister Pauline died when Marie was nine, she became withdrawn and virtually stopped speaking.

Trintignant was still married to Benchetrit at the time of her death, although the two had separated earlier in 2003.

Two of Trintignant's sons, and, are actors.

In 2003, Trintignant traveled to Vilnius, Lithuania, with her mother and her boyfriend, Bertrand Cantat, so she and her mother could finish work on Colette, une femme libre, a television movie in which Trintignant played the starring role.

On 26 July, Trintignant was in a hotel room in Vilnius when, according to Cantat, Trintignant received a text from her husband.

Cantat flew into a jealous rage, and he beat Trintignant severely.

Seven hours later, Trintignant's brother summoned emergency services to check the hotel room.

When they arrived, Trintignant had slipped into a deep coma.

She was transported to a hospital in Vilnius the next day; later, she was moved to the Hartmann Clinic, a hospital in Neuilly-sur-Seine, as her mother stated, "If she is to die, I want her to die in France."

Trintignant died in Neuilly from swelling of the brain at the age of 41 on 1 August 2003.

When authorities first arrived at the hotel room, Cantat told them and Trintignant's parents that Trintignant had fallen backwards during their argument and hit her head against a wall.

An autopsy revealed that Cantat actually struck Trintignant in the head and face at least 19 times.

After the autopsy countered Cantat's version of events, Cantat would only admit to having "slapped" Trintignant four times and then putting her to bed while not knowing that she had incurred severe and irreversible brain damage due to the assault.

Although Cantat attempted to argue in court that he should be convicted of manslaughter, he was convicted of the slightly more severe "murder with indirect intent" and sentenced to eight years in prison.

2004

At the request of his lawyers, Cantat was moved from the Lithuanian Lukiškės prison, to a prison near Muret, France, in September 2004.