Trintignant, Nadine (1934–)
Trintignant, Nadine (1934–)
French film director and screenwriter. Name variations: N. Marquand or Nadine Marquand. Born Nadine Marquand on Nov 11, 1934, in Nice, France; sister of Serge Marquand (actor) and Christian Marquand (actor-director); became 2nd wife of Jean-Louis Trintignant (actor), in 1960; children: Marie Trintignant (1962–2003, character actress) and Vincent Trintignant (b. 1973, assistant director).
Pursuing an early interest in the cinema, dropped out of school at age 15 to become an assistant in a film lab; subsequently worked as an assistant editor and script clerk before becoming editor for such directors as Serge Bourguignon, Jacques Doniol-Valcroze, and Jean-Luc Godard; launched her own directing career with a few shorts and a number of tv productions, then undertook 1st feature film, Mon Amour, Mon Amour (1967); wrote her own scripts, which frequently starred husband Jean-Louis; other films include Le Voleur de Crimes (1969), Ça n'arrive qu'aux autres (It Only Happens to Others, 1971), Defense de savoir (1973), Le Voyage de Noces (Jalousie, 1976), Premier Voyage (1979), L'Ete Prochain (Next Summer, 1984), Le Maison de Jade (1988) and Lumière et compagnie (1995); also directed the tv miniseries "Colette, une femme libre" (2004).
See also Women in World History.