Maximilienne(1884-1978)
- Actress
In his sketches, popular French
comedian'Fernand Raynaud' was often
bullied by a self-righteous sharp-tongued spinster called Mademoiselle
Lelongbec, the parish organist. Tall, lean and unattractive,
Maximilenne (born Henriette Genty in 1884) seemed born to play the part
and she WAS the obvious choice for director
Robert Darène when, in 1958, he prepared
to film a Fernand Raynaud's vehicle
entitled "Houla Houla". Donning the attire of Mlle Lelongbec
Maximilenne had the distinguished opportunity to nag poor Fernand, on
the big screen this time around. A role that epitomizes a long screen
career, spanning the three decades between the advent of the sound
period and the birth of the French New Wave. During this time, she
embodied innumerable female authority figures such as a mother superior
("La route enchantée"), a school mistress ("Simplet"), the headmistress
of a reform school("Prison sans barreaux"), a Salvation Army general
("L'armoire volante") or a princess ("Le disque 1413"). She was rarely
married in her films, most of the time she was the narrow-minded old
maid. She was at her best as such in the role of one of the boarding
house guests in
Henri-Georges Clouzot's 1942
masterpiece "L'assassin habite au 21". And when she had indeed married
in a movie, she was usually a widow: her late husband had chosen to
leave life prematurely to escape her! Occasionally one of the old maids
and aunts she was given to play were affectionate, notably in
Fritz Lang's "Liliom " (1933). But
whether her characters were good or bad, Maximilienne had been one of
those colorful character actors and actresses the French cinema of the
classic era could not do without. And she will be fondly remembered for
that.