Claude Laydu

Born: 1927-03-10

Claude Laydu ([klod lɛjdy]; 10 March 1927 – 29 July 2011) was a Belgian-born Swiss actor on stage and in films. He was renowned for his performance in his film debut in the role of the young priest in Robert Bresson's Diary of a Country Priest (1951), which has been described as one of the greatest in the history of film. Laydu was born and grew up in Brussels. He moved to Paris to study at the National Academy of Dramatic Arts. He became a member of Madeleine Renaud and Jean-Louis Barrault's company at the Théâtre Marigny, when he was selected by director Robert Bresson for his first role in a film, as the titular young priest in Diary of a Country Priest, based on the 1936 novel of the same name by Georges Bernanos. They met to discuss the role, and Laydu prepared by spending time in a monastery and losing weight. While Bresson sometimes suggested acting got in the way of his moviemaking, Laydu, a practicing Catholic, "brought his own spirituality, instinctive presence and intense ascetic looks to the role." Claude Laydu's performance in the title role has been described as one of the greatest in the history of film. Jean Tulard, in his Dictionary of Film, wrote of him in this work, "No other actor deserves to go to heaven as much as Laydu." Laydu's next film, Le Voyage en Amérique (Trip to America, 1951), was a light comedy, but he was seen to have an austere style. His next film was Au Coeur de la Casbah (Heart of the Casbah, 1952), where he struggled in an affair; he played a lawyer of a man condemned to death in Nous Sommes Tous des Assassins (We Are All Murderers), the director André Cayatte's protest against the death penalty; and in Le Chemin de Damas (The Road to Damascus), Laydu played Saint Etienne (Saint Stephen). He played roles as a priest in La Guerra de Dios (I Was a Parish Priest, 1953) and as the title character, the Russian Orthodox Rasputin (1954). Over the next decade, Laydu worked in film steadily until Mafia alla sbarra (1963). His only two film projects after that were Le Destin de Priscilla Davies (1979) and Nounours (1995), which he co-wrote with his wife, Christine. In 1962 he and his wife developed a puppet show for television, called Bonne nuit les petits (Good Night, Little Ones). Five minutes long, it was shown nightly and its characters Nounours, Pimprenelle and Nicolas became known by generations of French children, as it was produced for more than a decade. Laydu performed the voice of the Sandman, who spoke the title each night. Laydu and his wife revived it in 1995 as Nounours and it ran for several years. There was associated development and marketing of numerous related books, records, videos and dolls. He and co-star Linette Lemercier (who voiced Oscar) were the only ones who reprised their roles in the reboot series. The show became very popular in Canada as it airs on Ici Radio-Canada Télé right before Le Téléjournal Ce Soir.


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Attila

as Valentiniano Caesar
Released: 1954-12-27

Attila, the leader of the barbarian Huns and called by the Romans "The Scourge of God", sweeps...

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Diary of a Country Priest

as Priest of Ambricourt
Released: 1951-02-07

An inexperienced, sickly priest shows up in the rural French community of Ambricourt, where he...

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Italienisches Capriccio

as Carlo Goldoni
Released: 1961-06-08

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I Was a Parish Priest

as Andrés
Released: 1953-09-30

A young priest encounters major problems in the diocese where he must preach the word of the...

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The Wheel

as Roland Pelletier
Released: 1957-07-02

Pierre is an engine driver who adopts a small girl, a WWI orphan. A widower, he sees in her the...

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Good Lord Without Confession

as Roland Dupont
Released: 1953-10-09

Stuck in a loveless marriage, bourgeois industrialist Francois falls in love with Janine,...

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We Are All Murderers

as Philippe Arnaud
Released: 1952-05-21

Originally titled Nous Sommes Tout des Assassins, We Are All Murderers was directed by Andre...

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Napoleon Road

as uncredited
Released: 1953-10-14

A greedy advertising executive wants to attract the tourists into a small village:he claims...

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Napoleon Road

as Pierre Marchand
Released: 1953-10-14

A greedy advertising executive wants to attract the tourists into a small village:he claims...

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Symphony of Love

as Franz Schubert
Released: 1954-08-04

It is a biopic portraying the life of the composer Franz Schubert.

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The Dialogue of the Carmelites

as Le Chevalier de la Force
Released: 1960-06-01

This drama about the Carmelite order of nuns is set during the French Revolution. A young woman...

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Trip to America

as François Soalhat
Released: 1951-10-31

As part of the fascination in post World War II France with American culture, a young French...

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Price of Love

as Pierre Ménard
Released: 1955-01-05

Because he loved a trainer named Suzy too much, honest Pierre Menard wasted his life and died....

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Heart of the Casbah

as uncredited
Released: 1952-01-24

Maria-Pilar is the new wife of an Algerian gangster whom the police have just arrested. The son...

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Mafia alla sbarra

as uncredited
Released: 1963-02-15

The story of a poor family and their relationship with the local mafia.

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The Road to Damascus

as Etienne
Released: 1952-12-05

Saul De Tarse is a Roman soldier who is making rough all over. He arrives at the Golgotha when...

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Altair

as Mario Rossi
Released: 1956-02-09

In the military academy of the Nisida Air Force a new course begins which sees among the new...

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Rasputin

as Héliodore
Released: 1954-07-19

Gregory Iefommovich Raspoutine is a monk with healing powers and a liking for debauchery who...

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Bonne nuit les petits

as Le Marchand de sable (voice)
First aired: 1962-06-02

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