‘Devil in the Flesh’ French and International Star, Dies at 101
The French actress made several films in Hollywood, including Under My Skin with John Garfield and The Prize with Paul Newman.
Micheline Presle, the standout French actress who starred in the controversial Devil in the Flesh before making a foray into Hollywood appearing opposite John Garfield, Tyrone Power, Errol Flynn, and Paul Newman, has died. She was 101.
Presle died Wedneday in the Paris suburb of Nogent-sur-Marne, her son-in-law Olivier Bomsel confirmed.
Presle came to international attention when she portrayed a nurse having an affair with a student (Gérard Philipe) in the World War I drama Devil in the Flesh (1947).
It featured a woman who took a lover while her husband was away at war, and thus generated a great deal of discussion.
The National Board of Review (NBR) voted Devil in the Flesh as one of the 10 best films of the year.
In 1949, Presle met American actor William Marshall, who had been married to another French star, Michele Morgan, and followed him to America. They would wed that year in Santa Barbara.
She was signed by 20th Century Fox, which changed her surname to Prelle and cast her as a café owner who falls in love with a crooked jockey (Garfield) in Jean Negulesco’s Under My Skin (1950), based on Ernest Hemingway short story.
She starred with Power in the Technicolor war film American Guerilla in the Philippines (1950), directed by Fritz Lang.
She then was loaned out to Republic Pictures to work with Flynn in The Adventures of Captain Fabian (1951). Marshall directed that film, which was shot in France from a screenplay written by Flynn.
But as these features failed to generate much heat, she and Marshall divorced in 1954, and she returned to France.
The daughter of an investment banker, Presle was born Micheline Nicole Julia Émilienne Chassagne in Paris on August 22, 1922.
After a few minor roles, she scored a breakthrough with her turn as the leader of a group of girls distressed by their parents’ divorces in G.W. Pabst’s Young Girls in Trouble (1939).
She would adopt the surname of the character she played, Jacqueline Presle, as her stage name.
In Abel Gance’s Paradise Lost (1940), she portrayed both a mother and her daughter.
After her stay in the U.S., Presle started a comeback with a central role in the English-language murder mystery Chance Meeting(1959), directed by Joseph Losey.
She would return to Hollywood to portray a former French showgirl and mother of Sandra Dee’s character in the romantic comedy If a Man Answers(1962), which also starred Dee’s then-husband, Bobby Darin.
In 1963, she played a scientist alongside Newman in the spy drama The Prize (1963), set against the backdrop of a Nobel Prize ceremony.
From 1965-71, she starred on the French comedy series Les Saintes Chéries.
Her big-screen résumé also included Male Hunt (1964), The Legend of Frenchie King (1971), Samuel Fuller’s Thieves After Dark (1984) and Alain Resnais’ I Want to Go Home (1989), for which she received a César nomination.
She received an honorary César in 2004.
Her daughter, director Tonie Marshall, who won a César for Venus Beauty Institute, died in 2020 at age 68
Death in Hollywood: Micheline Presle, French Movie Star (“Devil in the Flesh,” Opposite Gerard Philipe), Dies at 101
‘Devil in the Flesh’ French and International Star, Dies at 101
The French actress made several films in Hollywood, including Under My Skin with John Garfield and The Prize with Paul Newman.
Micheline Presle, the standout French actress who starred in the controversial Devil in the Flesh before making a foray into Hollywood appearing opposite John Garfield, Tyrone Power, Errol Flynn, and Paul Newman, has died. She was 101.
Presle died Wedneday in the Paris suburb of Nogent-sur-Marne, her son-in-law Olivier Bomsel confirmed.
Presle came to international attention when she portrayed a nurse having an affair with a student (Gérard Philipe) in the World War I drama Devil in the Flesh (1947).
The National Board of Review (NBR) voted Devil in the Flesh as one of the 10 best films of the year.
She was signed by 20th Century Fox, which changed her surname to Prelle and cast her as a café owner who falls in love with a crooked jockey (Garfield) in Jean Negulesco’s Under My Skin (1950), based on Ernest Hemingway short story.
She starred with Power in the Technicolor war film American Guerilla in the Philippines (1950), directed by Fritz Lang.
She then was loaned out to Republic Pictures to work with Flynn in The Adventures of Captain Fabian (1951). Marshall directed that film, which was shot in France from a screenplay written by Flynn.
But as these features failed to generate much heat, she and Marshall divorced in 1954, and she returned to France.
The daughter of an investment banker, Presle was born Micheline Nicole Julia Émilienne Chassagne in Paris on August 22, 1922.
After a few minor roles, she scored a breakthrough with her turn as the leader of a group of girls distressed by their parents’ divorces in G.W. Pabst’s Young Girls in Trouble (1939).
She would adopt the surname of the character she played, Jacqueline Presle, as her stage name.
In Abel Gance’s Paradise Lost (1940), she portrayed both a mother and her daughter.
After her stay in the U.S., Presle started a comeback with a central role in the English-language murder mystery Chance Meeting(1959), directed by Joseph Losey.
In 1963, she played a scientist alongside Newman in the spy drama The Prize (1963), set against the backdrop of a Nobel Prize ceremony.
From 1965-71, she starred on the French comedy series Les Saintes Chéries.
Her big-screen résumé also included Male Hunt (1964), The Legend of Frenchie King (1971), Samuel Fuller’s Thieves After Dark (1984) and Alain Resnais’ I Want to Go Home (1989), for which she received a César nomination.
She received an honorary César in 2004.
Her daughter, director Tonie Marshall, who won a César for Venus Beauty Institute, died in 2020 at age 68