Biography
The son of French writer/director Pierre Léaud and actress Jacqueline Pierreux, Jean-Pierre Léaud used none of his connections to win his first screen role. The 15-year-old Léaud answered an open call posted by
François Truffaut, and as a result was cast as troubled adolescent Antoine Doinel in Truffaut's
The 400 Blows. It is now generally accepted that the character of Antoine Doinel was conceived as Truffaut's alter ego, reenacting the triumphs and traumas of the director's life, not only in
400 Blows but also as the protagonist of the subsequent Antoine and Colette (1962, part of the episode film Love at Twenty),
Stolen Kisses (1968),
Bed and Board (1970), and
Love on the Run (1979). There were also generous doses of Jean-Pierre Léaud himself in Antoine; at Truffaut's urging, Léaud frequently improvised his dialogue, drawing from his own deep-rooted emotional turmoil. In addition to his many Truffaut assignments, Léaud was also a regular in the films of
Jean-Luc Godard, including Masculin/Feminin (1966), for which he won the Berlin Festival award for Best Actor. In addition, he co-starred in
Bernardo Bertolucci's
Last Tango in Paris (1972) with
Marlon Brando and
Maria Schneider. On occasion, Léaud has functioned as assistant director for his starring films. Since the heyday of the New Wave, his film appearances have been erratic, with occasional bursts of activity followed by long, dolorous periods of inactivity. In 1996, he made something of a triumphant comeback as a put-upon director in
Olivier Assayas'
Irma Vep, and the same year he had a supporting role in
Bertrand Blier's
Mon Homme. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide