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André Sauvage (Directing)

Male

D.O.B: 1891-07-12

D.O.D: 1975-11-16

André Sauvage (born in Bordeaux on July 12, 1891, died on November 16, 1975 in Boutigny-Prouais), was a French filmmaker, director, writer and painter of the interwar period. Close to Max Jacob, Robert Desnos, André Gide, Jean Cocteau, Man Ray, the Prévert brothers and Jean Renoir, he was then known for works such as La Traversée du Grépon, Portrait of Greece and Studies on Paris, but also for his literary writings and his paintings. Passionate traveler, he designs his films according to each landscape or population encountered by adding an ethnographic dimension. Sauvage, Marc Allégret's film teacher, cast Michel Simon in one of his first roles. In its wake, other personalities start such as the young critics Jean George Auriol and Jacques Brunius. André Sauvage remains unknown to the general public today, and forgotten by most moviegoers, because of a tragic affair: that of the film of the Center Asia expedition...