Marceline Loridan-Ivens

Overview

Known for
Acting
Gender
Other
Birthday
Mar 19, 1928 (97 years old)
Death date
Sep 18, 2018

Marceline Loridan-Ivens

Known For

La vie balagan de Marceline Loridan-Ivens
1h 28m
Movie 2018

La vie balagan de Marceline Loridan-Ivens

Un été + 50
1h 15m
Movie 2011

Un été + 50

A seventy-five-minute documentary featuring outtakes from "Chronicle of a Summer" (1961), along with new interviews with co-director Edgar Morin and some of the film’s participants.

La vie après la Shoah
Movie 2010

La vie après la Shoah

God's Offices
2h 2m
Movie 2008

God's Offices

A realist dramedy about dedicated social workers who devote their long shifts to helping pregnant women.

Bride of the Wind
0h 30m
Movie 1998

Bride of the Wind

In 1998, a German documentary filmmaker named Daniela Schulz made a film about Joris Ivens’s dynamic partner, Bride of the Wind (Windsbraut), as a tribute to their decades of work together. Calling her friend Marceline “the second part of this legend [of Joris Ivens]”, she pays tribute to her as one who, after losing her “beloved and symbiotic partner, has kept her dynamism and liveliness as a person and a filmmaker”. The cinematic portrait illustrates how Loridan was in fact much more than a shadow at Ivens’s side.

A Tale of the Wind
1h 20m
Movie 1989

A Tale of the Wind

It is an autobiographical fiction starring Ivens as an old man who has spent his life trying to "tame the wind and harness the sea" by capturing them on film.

Biography

Marceline Loridan-Ivens (née Rozenberg; 19 March 1928[1] – 18 September 2018) was a French writer and film director. Her memoir But You Did Not Come Back details her time in Auschwitz-Birkenau. She was married to Joris Ivens. Marceline Rozenberg was born to Polish Jewish parents who emigrated to France in 1919. At the beginning of World War II, her family settled in Vaucluse, where she joined the French Resistance. She and her father, Szlama, were captured by the Gestapo and deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau by Convoy 71 on 13 April 1944, along with Simone Veil and Anne-Lise Stern, then to Bergen-Belsen, and eventually to Theresienstadt. The camp was liberated on 10 May 1945. by the Red Army. She married [when?] Francis Loridan, an engineer. Years later they divorced, but she was allowed to keep his surname. She joined the French Communist Party in 1955 and left it a year later. She then encountered "deviationists", such as Henri Lefebvre and Edgar Morin, wrote manuscripts for intellectuals, worked in the reprographic service of a polling institute, was bag carrier for the Algerian National Liberation Front and frequented Saint-Germain-des-Prés. In 1961, Edgar Morin cast her in the film Chronique d'un été, thus making her film debut. In 1963, she met and married the documentary director Joris Ivens. She assisted him in his work and co-directed some of his films, including 17th Parallel: Vietnam in War (1968). They left together for Vietnam, where they met Ho Chi Minh. From 1972 to 1976, during the Cultural Revolution, Joris Ivens and Marceline Loridan worked in China and directed How Yukong Moved the Mountains, a series of 12 films. Criticized by Jiang Qing, they had to quickly leave China. Loridan-Ivens gave lectures and testimonies in colleges and high schools on the Holocaust.

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