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    • He needed the money

      • Despite parental pressure to pursue a 'respectable' career, Abel Gance was addicted to the theatre, and made his acting debut at the age of 19. He started acting in films in 1909 because he needed the money - he was deeply unimpressed with the film medium at that point.
      www.imdb.com › name › nm0304098
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  2. Despite parental pressure to pursue a 'respectable' career, Abel Gance was addicted to the theatre, and made his acting debut at the age of 19. He started acting in films in 1909 because he needed the money - he was deeply unimpressed with the film medium at that point.

    • October 25, 1889
    • November 10, 1981
  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Abel_GanceAbel Gance - Wikipedia

    Abel Gance (French:; born Abel Eugène Alexandre Péréthon; 25 October 1889 – 10 November 1981) was a French film director, producer, writer and actor. A pioneer in the theory and practice of montage, he is best known for three major silent films: J'accuse (1919), La Roue (1923), and Napoléon (1927).

  4. May 13, 2024 · Notable Works: “Napoléon”. Abel Gance (born October 25, 1889, Paris, France—died November 10, 1981, Paris) was an important director in the post-World War I revival of the French cinema who is best known for extravagant historical spectacles.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. www.imdb.com › name › nm0304098Abel Gance - IMDb

    It was first screened in London using the three projector format with a score composed and conducted by Carl Davis in 1979. Francis Ford Coppola produced the screenings at the Radio City Hall in the US, in 1981 to much acclaim. His father Carmine Coppola, composed and conducted the score in the US.

    • January 1, 1
    • Paris, France
    • January 1, 1
    • Paris, France
  6. Nov 22, 2023 · After the coming of sound, Gance reused sequences from his silent film alongside new material to form Napoleon Bonaparte (1935). In the 1950s, he returned to Napoleon Bonaparte and added the final triptych from 1927. A few years later, Gance imposed more new material on to his Napoleonic palimpsest to produce Bonaparte and the Revolution (1971).

  7. The young Abel Gance had no time for the cinema, in fact he was contemptuous of it and considered theatre a far superior form of art. Unable to subsist on his meagre earnings as a stage actor, he began writing film scripts, which led the director Léonce Perret to give him his first screen role in Molière (1909).

  8. Apr 27, 2017 · He began his career in the theatre, but his talent as a film director was established through a series of skillfully made comedies and melodramas produced in the 1910s. Gance’s cinematic career reached its zenith in the 1920s, when his increasingly ambitious film projects garnered much notoriety in the press.

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