Geneviève Bujold

(Redirected from Genevieve Bujold)

Geneviève Bujold (French pronunciation: [ʒənvjɛv byʒo]; born July 1, 1942) is a Canadian actress. For her portrayal of Anne Boleyn in the period drama film Anne of the Thousand Days (1969), Bujold received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress. Her other film credits include The Trojan Women (1971), Earthquake (1974), Obsession (1976), Coma (1978), Murder by Decree (1979), Tightrope (1984), Choose Me (1984), Dead Ringers (1988), The House of Yes (1997), and Still Mine (2012).

Geneviève Bujold
Geneviève Bujold in Anne of the Thousand Days
Born (1942-07-01) July 1, 1942 (age 81)
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
OccupationActress
Years active1962–present
Spouse
(m. 1967; div. 1974)
PartnerDennis Hastings (1977–2017)
Children2

Early life

She was born in Montreal, Quebec, the daughter of Laurette (née Cavanagh), a maid,[1] and Joseph Firmin Bujold, a bus driver.[2] She is of French Canadian descent, with distant Irish ancestry.[3]

Bujold received a strict convent education for twelve years, which she disliked. She was expelled from the convent for reportedly reading Fanny by Marcel Pagnol.[4]She entered the Montreal Conservatory of Dramatic Art,[5][6] where she was trained in the classics of French theatre.

Career

Early work

Two months before she was to graduate she made her stage debut as Rosine in Le Barbier de Séville in 1961 with Theâtre de Gesù. She quit the school and was rarely out of work, being in demand for radio, stage, TV and film.[4] Bujold made her TV debut with Le square (1963), a 60-minute TV film based on a play by Marguerite Duras, co-starring Georges Groulx.She was in episodes of Jeudi-théâtre ("Atout... Meurtre") and Les belles histoires des pays d'en haut ("La terre de Bidou") and guest starred on Ti-Jean caribou.Her Canadian feature film debut was in Amanita Pestilens (1963). She was then in an international co production La fleur de l'âge, ou Les adolescentes (1964) and had a lead role in La terre à boire (1964), the first Quebec feature to be privately financed.[7]Bujold starred in two 30 minute shorts, La fin des étés (1964) and Geneviève (1964). She toured Canada performing plays also worked steadily in radio and was voted actress of the year in Montreal.[4][8][9]

French films

In 1965, she toured Russia and France with the company of the Théâtre du Rideau Vert. While in Paris, Bujold was in a play A House... and a Day when she was seen by renowned French director Alain Resnais. He selected her for a role in his film The War Is Over, opposite Yves Montand and Ingrid Thulin.She returned home briefly to appear in "Romeo and Jeannette" by Jean Anouilh alongside Michael Sarrazin, for a Canadian TV show Festival.[8] Also for that show she did productions of The Murderer and A Doll's House. She contributed with vocals in The Devil's Toy, a documentary about skateboarding in Montreal, directed by Claude Jutra (1966).[10]

She stayed in France to make two more films: Philippe de Broca's King of Hearts (1966), with Alan Bates, and Louis Malle's The Thief of Paris (1967), with Jean-Paul Belmondo. Bujold won the Prix Suzanne as the Discovery of the Year and Elle magazine called her The Girl of the Day. Despite having established herself in France, however, she returned to Canada.[4]

Return to Canada

Then-husband Paul Almond directed her in "The Puppet Caravan" for Festival in 1967. She appeared in Michel Brault's film Between Salt and Sweet Water (1967), then went to New York to play the title role in a production of Saint Joan (1967) for Hallmark Hall of Fame on American TV. Although she said she preferred film most and television least out of all the mediums, she received great acclaim for this including an Emmy nomination.[11][12]

In Canada she starred in Isabel (1968), written and directed by Almond. It was one of the first Canadian films to be picked up for distribution by a major Hollywood studio.[13]

Anne of the Thousand Days and international stardom

International recognition came in 1969, when she starred as Anne Boleyn in Charles Jarrott's film Anne of the Thousand Days, with Richard Burton. Producer Hal B. Wallis cast her after seeing her in Isabel.[14]

For her performance, she received the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama,[15] and received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress.[16] It was released by Universal who signed her to a three-picture contract.[4]

Back in Canada, she did a second feature with her husband, The Act of the Heart (1970), co starring Donald Sutherland, which earned her a Best Actress at the Canadian Film Awards. She wrote and starred in a short film, Marie-Christine (1970), directed by Claude Jutra.Wallis and Universal wanted Bujold to star in Mary, Queen of Scots (1971) but she refused so they sued her for $450,000.[4]

Instead she played the role of Cassandra, a Greek prophet, in Michael Cacoyannis's film version of The Trojan Women (1971), opposite Katharine Hepburn, Vanessa Redgrave, and Irene Papas. It was shot in Spain.In Canada, she made Journey (1972) with Almond and co-starring John Vernon. Bujold won another Canadian Film Award for Best Actress.

She starred in Claude Jutra's Kamouraska (1973), based on a novel by Anne Hébert, for which she received her third Canadian Film Award for Best Actress.[17]In the US, she appeared in an adaptation of Jean Anouilh's Antigone for PBS's Great Performances in 1974.[1]

Hollywood

In 1973, after her marriage ended, she relocated to Los Angeles.[18] Shortly thereafter, she settled the lawsuit with Universal, agreeing to a three-picture film contract starting with Earthquake (1974), with Charlton Heston.

Bujold went to France to make Incorrigible (1975) with de Broca and Belmondo. For Hallmark Hall of Fame and the BBC she appeared in Caesar and Cleopatra (1975) alongside Alec Guinness.

At Universal Studios, she was the lead in Swashbuckler (1976) alongside Robert Shaw. In an interview she said, "Robert Shaw is a man worth knowing."[18]

In 1976, she appeared in Obsession (1976) directed by Brian De Palma[19] co-starring Cliff Robertson (1976).Bujold made Alex & the Gypsy (1976) with Jack Lemmon and Another Man, Another Chance (1977), co-starring James Caan (1977) for Claude Lelouch.

She was lead with Michael Douglas in the medical thriller Coma (1978), directed by Michael Crichton, which was a box office hit.

Bujold returned to Canada to play a key role in the Sherlock Holmes film Murder by Decree (1979), which won her a Best Supporting Actress Award at the Canadian Film Awards.

For Walt Disney she appeared in the fantasy film The Last Flight of Noah's Ark (1980) with Elliott Gould and Charles Jarrott, director of Anne of the Thousand Days. She was directed by Almond once more in the Canadian Final Assignment (1980).

Bujold starred in a TV movie Mistress of Paradise (1981), then supported Christopher Reeve in Monsignor (1982), and Clint Eastwood in Tightrope (1984).

Alan Rudolph

Bujold starred in Choose Me (1984), directed and written by Alan Rudolph. She promptly made two more films for Rudolph: Trouble in Mind (1985) and The Moderns (1988), the latter set in Paris in the 1920s. She was part of his informal company of actors that he repeatedly used in his films, including Keith Carradine.

Bujold starred in David Cronenberg's Dead Ringers (1988) opposite Jeremy Irons, then made a TV movie Red Earth, White Earth (1989).[20] She did False Identity (1990) with Stacy Keach.

Canada

After a long absence from Quebec, she returned to appear in two more films by Michel Brault: The Paper Wedding (1989), and My Friend Max (1994). In between she went to France to make Rue du Bac (1991), and did another film with Almond, The Dance Goes On (1991). She had support roles in Oh, What a Night (1993), and An Ambush of Ghosts (1993).

Star Trek

In 1994, Bujold was chosen to play Captain Nicole Janeway (subsequently renamed Kathryn Janeway),[21] lead character in the ensemble cast of the American television series Star Trek: Voyager. However, she left the project after just two days of filming. Kate Mulgrew was subsequently cast in the role.[21]

Later career

Bujold had supporting roles in The Adventures of Pinocchio (1995), The House of Yes (1997), Last Night (1998), You Can Thank Me Later (1998), Eye of the Beholder (1999), The Bookfair Murders (2000), Children of My Heart (2001) and Alex in Wonder (2001)

Bujold was in Dead Innocent (1997) and was in a short Matisse & Picasso: A Gentle Rivalry (2001).

Bujold was back in Quebec to star in Chaos and Desire (2002), directed by Manon Briand. That year she said "I like doing studio films, independent films. I want to step up to the plate and do it. The role doesn't have to be long, but it has to be essential to the film. And it's got to be truthful to me. I defend my characters. They're like my babies."[22]

Bujold's later appearances include Jericho Mansions (2003), Finding Home (2004), Downtown: A Street Tale (2004), By the Pricking of My Thumbs (2005), Disappearances (2006), and Deliver Me (2006).

Bujold was also in The Trotsky (2009), For the Love of God (2011), and Northern Borders (2013).

In 2012, Bujold played a woman battling dementia in the sleeper romantic drama Still Mine.[23] Stephen Holden of The New York Times commented: "Ms. Bujold imbues Irene with a starchy tenacity and a sharp sense of humor",[24] while The Washington Post called her performance "superb" and "remarkably detailed".[25]

Bujold's later films include Chorus (2015).

Personal life

In 1967, Bujold married Canadian director Paul Almond. They had a son, Matthew, in 1968. After a separation of approximately two years, the couple divorced in 1974.[26]

In 1980, she had a second son, Emmanuel, with Dennis Hastings, a Reno-born carpenter she met in 1977 when he was contracted to build her Malibu house.[27] They separated quietly without publicity in 2017. Hastings died in 2020.[28]

Accolades

YearAssociationCategoryWorkResult
1967Prix Suzanne BianchettiMost Promising Young Actress[29]The Thief of ParisWon
1968Emmy AwardsOutstanding Single Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Drama[11]Saint JoanNominated
Canadian Film AwardsBest Actress[17]IsabelWon
1970Academy AwardsBest Actress[16]Anne of the Thousand DaysNominated
Golden Globe AwardsBest Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama[15]Won
Canadian Film AwardsBest Actress[17]The Act of the HeartWon
1973KamouraskaWon
1980Genie AwardsBest Supporting Actress[30]Murder by DecreeWon
1981Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role[30]Final AssignmentNominated
1988Los Angeles Film Critics AssociationBest Supporting Actress[31]Dead Ringers & The ModernsWon
Prix GémeauxBest Actress[32]L'EmpriseNominated
1989Genie AwardsPerformance by an Actress in a Leading Role[30]Dead RingersNominated
1990Prix GémeauxBest Actress[32]The Paper WeddingWon
1994Genie AwardsPerformance by an Actress in a Leading Role[30]My Friend MaxNominated
1998Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role[30]Last NightNominated
2010Canadian Comedy AwardsBest Performance by a Female - Film[16]The TrotskyNominated
2013Canadian Screen AwardsPerformance by an Actress in a Leading Role[33]Still MineNominated
2018Governor General's Performing Arts AwardsLifetime Artistic Achievement Award (Film)[34]Won

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
1963Amanita PestilensSophie Martin
1964GenevièveGenevièveShort subject
1964La fleur de l'âge, ou Les audolescentesGenevieve
1964La terre à boireBarbara
1964La fin des étésMarieShort subject
1966The War Is OverNadine Sallanches
1966King of HeartsCoquelicot
1967The Thief of ParisCharlotte
1967Between Salt and Sweet WaterGeneviève
1968IsabelIsabel
1969Anne of the Thousand DaysAnne Boleyn
1970Marie-ChristineShort subject
1970The Act of the HeartMartha Hayes
1971The Trojan WomenCassandra
1972JourneySaguenay
1973KamouraskaÉlisabeth
1974EarthquakeDenise
1975L'incorrigibleMarie-Charlotte Pontalec
1976SwashbucklerJane Barnet
1976ObsessionElizabeth Courtland / Sandra Portinari
1976Alex & the GypsyMaritza
1977Another Man, Another ChanceJeanne Leroy née Perriere
1978ComaDr. Susan Wheeler
1979Murder by DecreeAnnie Crook
1980The Last Flight of Noah's ArkBernadette Lafleur
1980Final AssignmentNicole Thomson
1982MonsignorCarla
1984TightropeBeryl Thibodeaux
1984Choose MeNancy
1985Trouble in MindWanda
1988Rough Justice
1988The ModernsLibby Valentin
1988Dead RingersClaire Niveau
1990False IdentityRachel Roux
1991Rue du BacMarie Aubriac
1992The Dance Goes OnRick's Mother
1992Oh, What a NightEva
1993An Ambush of GhostsIrene Betts
1994My Friend MaxMarie-Alexandrine Brabant
1996The Adventures of PinocchioLeona
1997The House of YesMrs. Pascal
1997Dead InnocentSuzanne St. Laurent
1998Last NightMrs. Carlton
1998You Can Thank Me LaterJoelle
1999Eye of the BeholderDr. Jeanne Brault
2001Alex in WonderNatalie
2002Chaos and DesireColette Lasalle
2003Jericho MansionsLily Melnick
2003Finding HomeKatie
2004Downtown: A Street TaleAimee Levesque
2005By the Pricking of My ThumbsRose Evangelista
2006DisappearancesCordelia
2006Deliver MeIrène
2009The TrotskyDenise Archambault
2011For the Love of GodSoeur Cécile 72 ans
2012Still MineIrene Morrison
2013The Legend of SarilaSaya (English version, voice)
2013Northern BordersAbiah Kittredge
2015ChorusGabrielle
2018Two GirlsJohanna as an Adult (voice)

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
1962–63MarcusTV series
1963Le squareHerTV movie
1963Jeudi-théâtreElle / La standardiste de l'hôtelTV series
1963Ti-Jean caribouTV series
1963–64Les Belles Histoires des pays d'en hautJulie FourchuTV series
1965–67FestivalJeannette / Nora / SoniaTV series
1967Saint JoanJoan of ArcTV movie
1974AntigoneAntigoneTV movie
1976Caesar and CleopatraCleopatraTV movie
1981Mistress of ParadiseElizabeth BeaufortTV movie
1988L'EmpriseTV movie
1989Red Earth, White EarthMadelineTV movie
1989The Paper WeddingClaire RocheleauTV movie
2000The Bookfair MurdersMargaret Dourie CantorTV movie
2000Children of My HeartGabrielle RoyTV movie

References

External links