French cinema's 'national treasure' Belmondo dies at 88

Actor Jean-Paul Belmondo, one of postwar French cinema’s biggest stars whose charismatic smile lit up the screen for half a century, has died aged 88 at his Paris home, his family announced Monday.

Belmondo, who first came to fame as part of the French New Wave cinema movement with films like “Breathless” by Jean-Luc Godard, went on to become a household name, acting in 80 films covering a multitude of genres, including comedies and thrillers.

“He had been very tired for some time. He died peacefully,” the family said in a statement sent to AFP by Belmondo’s lawyer, Michel Godest.

Belmondo, who was born on April 9, 1933 in the wealthy Paris suburb of Neuilly-sur-Seine, grew up in a family of artists. His father was a well-known sculptor.

Belmondo, who was bad at school but good at boxing, started his acting career in theatre before embarking on a film career that was to span half a century, with 130 million cinema tickets to his films sold.

Known in France as “Bebel”, Belmondo was also often called “Le Magnifique” (The Magnificent), after a 1970s secret agent satire in which he starred.

“He will always be The Magnificent,” President Emmanuel Macron tweeted. Calling Belmondo “a national treasure”, Macron added: “We all recognised ourselves in him”.

– ‘Solar, talented… and so French’ –

Former president Francois Hollande said that “everybody would have loved to be friends with him”, while ex-premier Manuel Valls called Belmondo “magnificent, solar, talented … and so French”.

Many others, including politicians, the French Foreign Legion and film fans the world over also paid homage to Belmondo on social media.

“It’s impossible not to feel that this is the end of an era,” tweeted Uruguay’s national film library. “The world is mourning a monument of film,” wrote a fan in Italy, Peter Patti, also on Twitter.

Apart from Godard, Belmondo went on to work with other famous French directors including Francois Truffaut, Alain Resnais, Louis Malle and Jean-Pierre Melville.

He later turned to film production, and returned to his first love, theatre. 

Belmondo’s acting career was cut short in 2001 when a stroke he suffered while on set left him handicapped.

He won France’s highest film prize, the Cesar, in 1988 for his role in “Itinerary of a Spoiled Child” — which he didn’t accept — and an honorary Cesar in 2017.

Many of his films became international hits, and Time magazine in 1964 declared Belmondo the face of modern France. 

He won several lifetime achievement awards, in 2010 from the Los Angeles Film Critics Association, in 2011 at the Cannes film festival, in 2016 at the Venice festival.

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