Yahoo Web Search

  1. Patrice Chéreau

    Patrice Chéreau

    French opera and theatre director, filmmaker, actor and producer

Search results

  1. Patrice Chéreau (French: [patʁis ʃeʁo]; 2 November 1944 – 7 October 2013) was a French opera and theatre director, filmmaker, actor and producer. In France he is best known for his work for the theatre, internationally for his films La Reine Margot and Intimacy , and for his staging of the Jahrhundertring , the centenary Ring cycle at the ...

  2. Oct 8, 2013 · Patrice Chéreau, a director whose iconoclastic theater, opera and film productions sometimes offered broad social critiques that made them both provocative and influential, died on Monday in...

  3. People also ask

  4. Director: Intimacy. Patrice Chéreau was born on 2 November 1944 in Lézigné, Maine-et-Loire, France. He was a director and actor, known for Intimacy (2001), The Last of the Mohicans (1992) and Queen Margot (1994). He died on 7 October 2013 in Clichy, Hauts-de-Seine, France.

    • January 1, 1
    • Lézigné, Maine-et-Loire, France
    • January 1, 1
    • Clichy, Hauts-de-Seine, France
  5. Oct 8, 2013 · Film, opera and stage director known for La Reine Margot and his Ring cycle at Bayreuth in 1976. Ronald Bergan. Tue 8 Oct 2013 13.05 EDT. Unusually for a director, Patrice Chéreau, who has...

    • Ronald Bergan
  6. Oct 7, 2013 · Patrice Chereau, the French director of opera, theater and films such as “Queen Margot” and “Those Who Love Me Can Take the Train,” died Monday in Paris of lung cancer. He was 68. A...

  7. Oct 8, 2013 · PARIS (AP) — Patrice Chereau, a celebrated French actor and director in film, theater and opera who was renowned for cutting-edge productions, has died, officials said Tuesday. He was 68. Chereau died in Paris on Monday from complications related to cancer, said the Artmedia talent agency that represented him.

  8. Oct 9, 2013 · “Patrice Chéreau, a director whose iconoclastic theater, opera and film productions sometimes offered broad social critiques that made them both provocative and influential, died on Monday in Paris” of lung cancer, writes Allan Kozinn in Monday’s (10/7) New York Times. “Mr.

  1. People also search for