Lucien Nonguet Explained

Birth Name:Lucien Henri Nonguet
Birth Date:10 May 1869
Birth Place:Poitiers, France
Death Place:Fay-aux-Loges, France
Nationality:French

Lucien Henri Nonguet (10 May 1869 – 22 June 1955) was a French film director, actor and screenwriter. He was one of the first film directors and screenwriters of the Pathé company.

Biography

Lucien Nonguet was born on 10 May 1869 in Poitiers, the son of dramatic artist Josué Nonguet (1831-1881). He was first an actor and director of extras at the theatre, among others at the Châtelet and l'Ambigu.

Nonguet was hired on at Pathé in 1901 as assistant to Ferdinand Zecca and director of figuration. This function, which in the theatre consisted of recruiting and directing actors for the needs of a play, was to become the forerunner of the director's job at the beginning of the cinema. Zecca and Nonguet began a series of important collaborations, starting in 1901 with Quo Vadis, based on the eponymous novel by Henryk Sienkiewicz. This was followed by the féérie, La Belle au bois dormant, in 1902. The best known of the Zecca/Nonguet collaborations is the 44 minutes silent film Vie et Passion du Christ, released in 1903.

Nonguet also directed alone a number of films at Pathé, specialising in historical reconstructions or reconstructed Actuality films, composed of a series of tableaux, filmed in long shots with no camera movement, and often based on photographs or paintings of the events depicted. Épopée Napoléonienne (1903), a two-part epic of the life of Napoleon seems to have been the model upon which Pathé's later histories and actualities were based. Other historical films directed by Nonguet include La Révolution en Russie (1905) and La Saint Barthelemy (1905).[1]

In 1920, Lucien Nonguet left the Pathé company to become director of the Alhambra-Saint-Ouen cinema.[2]

He died on 22 June 1955 in Fay-aux-Loges, a village in the Loiret, about 120km (80miles) southwest of Paris.

Selected filmography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Dayna Oscherwitz, MaryEllen Higgins, The A to Z of French Cinema, Scarecrow Press, 2009, p. 320.
  2. https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k7630899k/f6.item.r=%22nonguet%22alhambra%20saint%20ouen.zoom For the victims of the Midi.
  3. Russian interior Minister was killed on 15 July 1904 by a bomb thrown at his car in a street in Saint Petersburg.