Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Gabriel Gabrio

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
French

Role
  
Film actor

Name
  
Gabriel Gabrio

Years active
  
1920–1943

Occupation
  
Actor


Gabriel Gabrio mediasunifranceorgmedias5147103173formatwe

Full Name
  
Edouard Gabriel Lelievre

Born
  
13 January 1887 (
1887-01-13
)
Reims, Marne, France

Died
  
October 31, 1946, Bercheres-sur-Vesgre, France

Movies
  
Pepe le Moko, Wooden Crosses, Harvest, Lucrezia Borgia, Les Miserables

Similar People
  
Henri Fescourt, Raymond Bernard, Maurice Tourneur, Julien Duvivier, Abel Gance

Gabriel Gabrio (13 January 1887 – 31 October 1946) was a French stage and film actor whose career began in cinema in the silent film era of the 1920s and spanned more than two decades. Gabrio is possibly best recalled for his roles as Jean Valjean in the 1925 Henri Fescourt-directed adaptation of Victor Hugo's Les Misérables, Cesare Borgia in the 1935 Abel Gance-directed biopic Lucrèce Borgia and as Carlos in the 1937 Julien Duvivier-directed gangster film Pépé le Moko, opposite Jean Gabin.

Contents

Gabriel Gabrio Gabriel GABRIO Biographie et filmographie

Early years

Gabriel Gabrio Gabriel GABRIO Biographie et filmographie

Gabriel Gabrio was born Édouard Gabriel Lelièvre in Reims, France as the youngest of sixteen children. Gabrio's father worked for the Pommeray Champagne cellars. At a young age he developed a keen interest in puppet theater. As a teen, Gabrio grew to an impressive height of 6 feet 2 inches and after a stint as an apprentice glass window painter, set his sights on a career as a stage actor.

Gabriel Gabrio Gabriel Gabrio French postcard by CinemagazineEdition Pa Flickr

At the out break of World War I, the blue-eyed Gabrio enlisted in the French Army and served four years during the hostilities. After being demobilized, Gabrio relocated to Paris where he performed in such theaters as the Gaîté Rochechouart, the Théâtre des Ambassadeurs, the Comédie Montaigne and the Odéon in roles by George Bernard Shaw and William Shakespeare, among others.

Film career

Gabrio made his film debut in the 1920 Germaine Dulac-directed film La fête espagnole (English release title: Spanish Fiesta). In 1924 he was cast by film director Henri Fescourt to appear as Jean Valjean, the literary protagonist in the film adaptation of the Victor Hugo novel Les Misérables whose twenty-year-long struggle with the law for stealing bread during a time of economic and social depression is chronicled. Gabrio's appearance in the film catapulted him to stardom.

In 1927, Gabrio began appearing in international films, such as 1927's Georg Jacoby-directed German film Der Faschingskönig, and in 1929 Gabrio made his first and only English language talkie The Inseparables, directed by Adelqui Migliar and John Stafford.

Gabrio's career flourished in France into the 1930s and is possibly best recalled for his roles such as Carlos, the gangster cohort of actor Jean Gabin's character Pépé le Moko in the 1937 film directed by Julien Duvivier. The film would become an international success and remade in America in 1938 as Algiers, starring Charles Boyer and Hedy Lamarr, and again in 1948 as a musical entitled Casbah, starring Tony Martin and Yvonne de Carlo.

As the 1940s began and Europe was thrust into the World War II, Gabriel Gabrio's film career remained intact in war-torn France. In 1942 he appeared in the Marcel Carné-directed and Jacques Prévert and Pierre Laroche-penned Les Visiteurs du Soir as the executioner, opposite Arletty and Marie Déa. The film, which debuted on 5 December 1942 during the Nazi occupation of France, is an allegory of the eternal struggle between good and evil as fourteenth-century lovers defy the Devil. The film was released under the English title The Devil's Envoys to American audiences in 1947.

Death

In 1943 Gabrio's health declined and he retired into the village of Berchères-sur-Vesgre in the West of France. He died there in 1946 at age 59. The village has since named a street after him in his honor.

Filmography

Actor
1943
Le val d'enfer as
Noël Bienvenu
1942
Les Visiteurs du Soir as
Le bourreau
1940
Campement 13 as
Charles
1939
Le corsaire
1939
Deuxième bureau contre kommandantur as
Heim
1938
The Life of Giuseppe Verdi as
Honoré De Balzac
1937
Harvest as
Panturle
1937
Puits en flammes as
Korsoum
1937
Gigolette as
Vauquelin
1937
Pépé le Moko as
Carlos
1936
Under Western Eyes as
Nikita
1935
Cavalerie légère as
Chérubini
1935
Lucrezia Borgia as
César Borgia
1935
Le baron tzigane as
Koloman Szupan
1935
Le diable en bouteille as
Mounier
1934
La rue sans nom as
Fiocle
1933
Les requins du pétrole as
James Godfrey
1933
The Two Orphans as
Jacques
1932
Coeurs joyeux as
Olivier
1932
Affaire classée (Short) as
Le patron du café
1932
La bête errante as
Gregory
1932
Au nom de la loi as
Amédée
1932
Wooden Crosses as
Sulphart
1931
The Letter as
Philipp Bennett
1931
L'homme qui assassina as
Sir Archibald Falkland
1930
Une belle garce as
Rabbas le dompteur
1930
Der König von Paris as
Rascol
1930
La bodega as
Fermin
1929
Fécondité as
Mathieu Froment
1929
The Inseparables as
Pietro
1928
Fünf bange Tage as
General Vorileff
1928
Jokeren as
Der Generalkonsul
1927
Le duel as
Debreole
1927
Antoinette Sabrier as
Germain Sabrier
1927
Le capitaine Rascasse as
'Capitaine' Rascasse
1926
Le Juif errant as
Dagobert
1926
Un fils d'Amérique as
Léon Verton
1925
Les misérables as
Jean Valjean
1920
La fête espagnole
Archive Footage
2018
Compression (TV Series documentary)
- Compression Le Val d'Enfer de Maurice Tourneur (2018)
2017
Un Français nommé Gabin (TV Movie documentary) as
Self
1936
The Road to Glory as
French Soldier (uncredited)

References

Gabriel Gabrio Wikipedia