Fernand Gravey
Actor/Actriz
67
Películas
5
Series
Fernand Gravey (25 December 1905 in Ixelles (Belgium) – 2 November 1970 in Paris, France), also known as Fernand Gravet in the United States, was the son of actors Georges Mertens and Fernande Depernay, who appeared in silent films produced by pioneer Belge Cinéma Film (a subsidiary of Pathé).
Gravey started performing at age five under his father's direction.
Before World War I, he received an education in Britain and could speak both French and English fluently, something which became useful in his movie roles. During the war, Gravey served in the British Merchant Marine Corp.
In 1936, he married the French actress Jane Renouardt, who was 15 years his senior. They remained together until his death on 2 November 1970 of a heart-attack. Jane died on 3 February 1972. They had no children.
Gravey performed in four films in 1913 and 1914 (as Fernand Mertens), but his first film of importance was L'Amour Chante, released in 1930. In 1933, he made Bitter Sweet, his first English language movie, which became more famous in its 1940 incarnation with Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy.
In 1937, after several more French and British movies, Gravey went to Hollywood, where the spelling of his last name was altered to Gravet, and he became the focus of a rather extensive Hollywood publicity campaign (instructing moviegoers to pronounce his name properly: "Rhymes with Gravy"). Unfortunately for Gravey, he was offered only standard parts, the type of Gallic-lover roles that Louis Jourdan played in the 1950s and 1960s.
The first two films he made in Hollywood were for Warner Brothers: The King and the Chorus Girl (1937), with Joan Blondell and Jane Wyman, and Fools for Scandal (1938), with Carole Lombard and Ralph Bellamy. Gravey then signed with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and was cast as Johann Strauss in the expensive biopic The Great Waltz, with Luise Rainer and Miliza Korjus.
MGM next planned to star Gravey in a film version of Rafael Sabatini's adventure novel Scaramouche, but instead he returned to France just before the Nazi occupation began. Although he had agreed to appear in German-approved French films, Gravey was an underminer of the invaders as a member of the French Secret Army and the Foreign Legion.
At the end of the war, Gravey was considered a war hero, and continued to be featured in French productions such as La Ronde (with Danielle Darrieux), and Royal Affairs in Versailles (1954). Among his last English language performances were How to Steal a Million (1966), Guns for San Sebastian (1968) and The Madwoman of Chaillot (1969), in which he played the police inspector.
Source: Article "Fernand Gravey" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Como Actor/Actriz
MGM Parade
Self
Cinépanorama
Self
Discorama
Self
Cómo robar un millón
Grammont
La Maison des bois
Le marquis de Fresnoy
La Bataille de San Sebastian
Governor
Harry's Girls
Andre Giraud
La Ronde
Charles Breitkopf, son mari
Si Versailles m'était conté
Molière
Hollywood Goes to Town
Self
La Garçonne
Georges Sauvage
That's Entertainment, Part II
(archive footage)
Les Caprices de Marie
Captain Ragot
Le Capitaine Fracasse
Baron de Cigognac
Promise at Dawn
Jean-Michel Serusier
Le Temps des œufs durs
Raoul Grandvivier
Sept hommes, une femme
Viscount Brémontier
The Queen's Affair
Carl
The Great Waltz
Johann 'Schani' Strauss II
Paradis perdu
Pierre Leblan
Varieté
Pierre
Mademoiselle Josette, ma femme
André Ternay
La dama de Beirut
Dr. Castello
Totò a Parigi
Il dottor Duclos
Ma femme est formidable
Raymond Corbier, sculpteur et mari de Sylvia
L'École des cocottes
Stanislas de La Ferronière
Un homme en habit
André de Lussanges
Bitter Sweet
Carl Linden
The Madwoman of Chaillot
Police sergeant
Breakdowns of 1938
Rene (archive footage) (uncredited)