Yves Massard
Yves Massard
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Yves Massard was born in 1925 in Saarland, a German region close to the
French border, occupied at the time by French troops according to the
provisions of the Versailles Treaty. Drawn to the theater, Massard was
trained by Pierre Fresnay and started a fruitful career on the boards
in such prestigious plays as 'Une grande fille toute simple' (by André
Roussin), 'Les mains sales' (by Jean-Paul Sartre) or 'Un tramway nommé
désir' (by Tennessee Williams). In parallel, he began to appear in a
few late forties films, but in bit parts. His roles started to grow in
1952 and for ten years he worked regularly in up to three films a year.
But nothing much remains of his work, at least in film history. To be
fair, it is not by starring for Maurice Cloche, Jean Gourguet or Walter
Kapps that you buy yourself a stairway to eternity. One major role in a
Spanish masterpiece Bardem's 'Calle Mayor' earned him a handful of
roles in Spain, but once again it was in desperately uninteresting
films, two of which were directed by Jesus Franco, the king of the Z's!
After 1962, this good actor worked only sporadically , sometimes in
tiny parts in A films (his scenes were even deleted in the Bronson
vehicle 'Le passager de la pluie'), at others in more fleshed-out roles
but in bombs by Max Pécas or the like. A sad ending for a thespian who
deserved better.
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