Sandrine Bonnaire | |
Birth Date: | 31 May 1967 |
Birth Place: | Gannat, Allier, France |
Years Active: | 1982–present |
Children: | 2 |
Sandrine Bonnaire (pronounced as /fr/; born 31 May 1967) is a French actress, film director and screenwriter who has appeared in more than 40 films. She won the César Award for Most Promising Actress for À Nos Amours (1983), the César Award for Best Actress for Vagabond (1985) and the Volpi Cup for Best Actress for La Cérémonie (1995). Her other films include Under the Sun of Satan (1987), Monsieur Hire (1989), East/West (1999) and The Final Lesson (2015).
Bonnaire was born in the town of Gannat, Allier, in the Auvergne region. She was born into a working-class family, the seventh of eleven children. She grew up in Grigny, Essonne.[1] Her acting career began in 1983, when she starred in the Maurice Pialat film À Nos Amours at age 16, as a girl from Paris beginning her sexual awakening. In 1984 she received the César Award for Most Promising Actress.
Her international breakthrough came in 1985 with her portrayal of the main character, a vagrant who fails both physically and morally, in Vagabond (Sans toit ni loi), directed by Agnès Varda. The film earned Bonnaire her second César Award. Vagabond premiered at the 42nd Venice International Film Festival, where it won the Golden Lion. The jury deemed Bonnaire's performance among the best of the year, but decided against awarding her the Volpi Cup for Best Actress prize because both the actresses they judged to have given the best performances were in films that won major awards.[2]
Bonnaire worked again with Pialat on Under the Sun of Satan (Sous le soleil de Satan) which won the Palme d'Or at the 1987 Cannes Film Festival. Monsieur Hire, directed by Patrice Leconte, followed in 1989, along with further work with directors Jacques Doillon and Claude Sautet.
In 1995, Bonnaire starred as an apparently simple maid in Claude Chabrol's widely acclaimed thriller La Cérémonie. The film and its stars won awards internationally, including the Volpi Cup for Best Actress at the 52nd Venice Film Festival for both Bonnaire and co-star Isabelle Huppert.
In 2004, Bonnaire starred in another Leconte film, Intimate Strangers, which was an arthouse box-office hit in the United States.[3]
In 2017, Bonnaire starred in Gaël Morel's film about reverse immigration, Prendre le large.[4] At the 8th Magritte Awards she received an Honorary Magritte Award from the Académie André Delvaux.[5]
In 2024, Bonnaire began the filming of Slow Joe.[6]
Bonnaire has a daughter from a relationship with actor William Hurt, whom she met in 1991 during filming of the Albert Camus novel The Plague (La Peste). They acted together in Secrets Shared with a Stranger (1994). In 2003, she married actor and screenwriter Guillaume Laurant, with whom she has a second daughter. She wrote and directed the 2012 movie J'enrage de son absence with her ex William Hurt as the main role. Bonnaire and Guillaume Laurant divorced in 2015.[7]
Year | Title | Cast | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2007 | Elle s'appelle Sabine (Her Name is Sabine) | Sabine Bonnaire | Documentary Cannes Film Festival - Directors' Fortnight or Critics' Week French Syndicate of Cinema Critics - Best First Film Globe de Cristal for Best Documentary Nominated - Cannes Film Festival - Golden Camera Nominated - Chicago International Film Festival - Best Documentary Nominated - César Award for Best Documentary Film | ||
2012 | J'enrage de son absence | Feature film | [32] | ||
2016 | Marianne Faithfull - Fleur d'âme | Marianne Faithfull, Sandrine Bonnaire | Documentary film |
Year | Award | Category | Film | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1984 | César Awards | Most Promising Actress | À nos amours | |
1986 | Best Actress | Sans toit ni loi | ||
1988 | Sous le soleil de Satan | |||
1990 | Monsieur Hire | |||
1995 | Joan the Maiden | |||
1996 | La Cérémonie | |||
2000 | Est-Ouest | |||
2009 | Best Documentary Film | Elle s'appelle Sabine | ||
1995 | Venice Film Festival | Volpi Cup for Best Actress | La Cérémonie | |