Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Creator / MarcelPagnol

Go To

1[[quoteright:280:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/unnamed_438.jpg]]
2
3Marcel Paul Pagnol (February 28, 1895 – April 18, 1974) was a UsefulNotes/{{Fr|ance}}ench writer, playwright, filmmaker and film producer.
4
5He is generally regarded as one of the greatest French writers of the 20th century, and something of a RenaissanceMan as he is considered to have excelled in almost every medium he delved into. He is a particularly important cultural figure for [[UsefulNotes/DepartementalIssues Provence]] (South-Eastern/Mediterranean France), the area where he was born and grew up and which he naturalistically depicted in his novels, plays and films. He founded his own film studio in Marseille in 1934. It closed in 1970.
6
7He is the first filmmaker to have been inducted at the prestigious Académie Française, in 1946, though it was for his literary works.
8----
9!!His novels and plays include:
10
11* The "Marseille Trilogy" plays ([[TheFilmOfThePlay and films]], which he wrote as well)
12** ''Marius'' (1927 for the play, 1931 for the film)
13** ''Fanny'' (1931 for the play, 1932 for the film)
14** ''César'' (1936 for the film, 1946 for the play)
15* The "Souvenirs d'enfance" ("Childhood memories") cycle, his [[{{Biography}} autobiography]]
16** ''La Gloire de mon père'' ("My father's Glory", 1957)
17** ''Le Château de ma mère'' ("My mother's Castle", 1957)
18** ''Le Temps des secrets'' ("The Time of secrets", 1960)
19** ''Le Temps des amours'' ("The Time of love", 1977)
20* The "L'Eau des collines" ("Water of the hills") cycle
21** ''Jean de Florette'' (1963)
22** ''Manon des sources'' (1963)
23
24!!His filmography includes:
25
26* Marseille Trilogy:
27** ''Marius'' (1931)
28** ''Fanny'' (1932)
29** ''César'' (1936)
30* ''Jofroi'' (1934)
31* ''Angèle'' (1934)
32* ''Merlusse'' (1935)
33* ''Cigalon'' (1935)
34* ''Topaze'' (1936, first version)
35* ''Harvest'' (1937)
36* ''Heartbeat'' (1938)
37* ''Film/TheBakersWife'' (1938)
38* ''The Well Digger's Daughter'' (1940)
39* ''Monsieur Brotonneau'' (1939)
40* ''Prayer to the Stars'' (1941, unfinished)
41* ''Naïs'' (1945)
42* ''The Pretty Miller Girl'' (1949, his first film in colour)
43* ''The Ways of Love'' (1950)
44* ''The Prize'' (1950)
45* ''Topaze'' (1951, SelfRemake)
46* ''Manon des Sources'' (1952)
47* ''Letters from My Windmill'' (1954)
48
49!!Adaptations of his works not made by him include:
50* ''Film/{{Fanny}}'' (1961)
51* ''[[Film/ManonDesSources Jean de Florette / Manon des Sources]]'' (1986)
52
53!!Tropes & Trivia in his works:
54
55* TheFilmOfThePlay: Not counting adaptations in which he wasn't involved at all, he wrote himself the scripts for 1931's ''Marius'' and 1932's ''Fanny'', which adapted the plays of the same name and are very often mentioned in the same breath as said plays, if they don't outright [[invoked]][[AdaptationDisplacement overshadow the plays]].
56* KidsAreCruel: In ''La Gloire de mon père'' (the first book of his autobiography), Pagnol says "I think that man is cruel by nature. Children prove it everyday."
57* [[invoked]]ProductionPosse: Actors Jules Muraire aka "Raimu" and Creator/{{Fernandel}}, who were both native from Provence and had strong accents from there, were regulars of Pagnol's films. He was friends with Raimu, besides.
58* ScreenToStageAdaptation: ''César'' capped off the "Marseille Trilogy" as a film first, in 1936, whereas ''Marius'' and ''Fanny'' started off as stage plays before being adapted on film. Pagnol adapted ''César'' for the stage in 1946.
59* UnwiseOwl: {{Invoked}} in ''Le Château de ma mère''. When hunting, a teenager Marcel witnesses a owl trying to escape from a trap, and doesn't feel the bird is particularly intelligent. The narration then digresses to mention he later heard in a school lesson that owls symbolise wisdom, and this sentence combined with the memory of his actual encounter with the owl makes him unable to stop laughing.

Top