
Marie-José Nat
Biography
Marie-José Benhalassa (22 April 1940 – 10 October 2019), known professionally as Marie-José Nat, was a French actress. Among her notable works in cinema were the sequel films Anatomy of a Marriage: My Days with Jean-Marc and Anatomy of a Marriage: My Days with Françoise (1963), directed by André Cayatte. In 1974, she received a Cannes Film Festival Award for Best Actress for her performance in the film Violins at the Ball.
Benhalassa was born in Bonifacio, Corse-du-Sud, to a Kabyle Berber father, Abdelkader Benhalassa, and a Corsican mother, Vincentine (Biancarelli).
In 1960, she married the actor Roger Dumas and divorced him in 1962. She then married French director Michel Drach with whom she had three sons, David, Julien and Aurélien. They divorced in 1981. She had a relationship of several years with the actor Victor Lanoux. On 30 September 2005 she married the painter, writer and songwriter Serge Rezvani in her third marriage.
She died in Paris of cancer at age 79.
After secondary studies at the Ajaccio high school, Benhalassa entered the cours Simon in Paris.
Benhalassa began her career as a cover-girl and haute-couture model. In 1955, she won a competition from the magazine Femmes d'aujourd'hui which allowed her to become Jean-Claude Pascal's partner in a photo comics entitled L'amour est un songe.
Denys de La Patellière offered her her first major role in 1959 in Rue des prairies alongside Jean Gabin, in which she played his daughter. The following year, she performed in a comedy sketch by René Clair alongside Claude Rich and Yves Robert, and obtained a major role in La Vérité by Henri-Georges Clouzot, playing Brigitte Bardot's rival opposite Sami Frey.
In 1965, she married filmmaker Michel Drach; they had three children and divorced in 1981. She starred in several of her husband's films: Amelie or The Time to Love (1961), Elise, or Real Life (1970) and Les violons du bal (1974), inspired by his childhood experiences during World War II. She was also known for Train of Life (1998), Litan (1982) and The Dacians (1966) with Jean Sorel, Jean-Louis Trintignant, Victor Lanoux and Bernadette Lafont as acting partners.
In 2001, Nat was a member of the jury at the 36th Karlovy Vary International Film Festival in 2001, and at the 24th Cabourg Film Festival in 2010.
She was the very first person to appear on the front cover of Télé 7 Jours in its current name on March 26, 1960.
Nat was awarded Best Actress at the 1974 Cannes Film Festival for her performance in Violins at the Ball, and the film was nominated for the Golden Palm award.
She was made a chevalier of the Légion d'honneur on 31 December 2004, chevalier of the Ordre national du Mérite on 18 November 2002 and promoted to the rank of officer on 14 November 2011, commandeur of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres as a member of the conseil de l'ordre of which she was a member from 1 March 2001 until April 2012.
Source: Article "Marie-José Nat" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Gallery


Known For
Acting History
2015
Murder in Batz as Jeanne Gourvennec
2007Winnetou darf nicht sterben as Herself
2006My Russian Uncle as Geneviève Ferrand
2004Elena's Gift as Elena
2004Ceux qui aiment ne meurent jamais as Éva
2003The Year when I Was Seven as Alice dite Yaya
1998Vivement dimanche as Self
1998Train of Life as Sura
1998Deux mamans pour Noël as Marie
1996Terre indigo as Mathilde Vallogne
1993Le nombril du monde as Oumi
1992Black River as Mrs. Ginette
1982Litan as Nora
1982Champs-Elysées as Self
1981A Mother, a Daughter
1981Disobedience as Madre di Luca
1977Replay as Cécile
1977Urgent ou à quoi bon exécuter des projets puisque le projet est en lui-même une jouissance suffisante as Self
1975Les Rosenberg ne doivent pas mourir as Ethel Rosenberg
1975Numéro un as Self
1975Les Rendez-vous du dimanche as Self
1974Tell Me You Love Me as Charlotte le Royer
1974Spécial cinéma as Self
1974Violins at the Ball as She, Michel's wife
19736 Calvary Street
19736 Calvary Street as Françoise Verbrugge
1972Les Gens de Mogador as Julia Angellier
1972Midi trente as Self
1972Embassy as Laure
1971Cadet Rousselle as Self
1970Elise, or Real Life as Elise Le Tellier
1970Opium and the Stick as Farroudja
1969Diamond Rush as Lucia
1967The Dacians as Meda
1966Diamond Safari as Electre
1965A Woman in White as Claude Sauvage
1965The Real Bargain as Béatrice
1965Dim Dam Dom as Self
1964Anatomy of a Marriage: My Days with Jean-Marc as Françoise
1964Anatomy of a Marriage: My Days with Françoise as Françoise Dubreuil
1963Un coup dans l'aile as Nicole
1962Sentimental Education as Anne Arnoux
1962La colère
1962The Seven Deadly Sins as La Jeune Femme (segment "La colère")
1961The Marriage of Figaro as Chérubin
1961Amelie or The Time to Love as Amélie
1961The Menace as Josepha
1960The Truth as Annie Marceau
1960Love and the Frenchwoman as Line, la jeune mariée (segment "Le Mariage")
1960Long Live the Duke!
1959Rue de Paris as Odette
1959Secret professionnel as Elvire
1959You Have Nothing to Declare? as Lise Dupont
1959La Nuit de Tom Brown as Dorothy "Dot" Brown
1958Happy Arenas
1957Give Me My Chance as Rosine
1956Crime and Punishment as La jeune fille du bal
1956Cinépanorama as Self
—Anatomy of a Marriage as Françoise








