French film director Agnès Varda, who was a pioneer during the new-wave revolution of the 1950s and '60s and who kept making important films for the next five decades, has died at age 90.
A representative of Varda's family confirmed the news of her death to NPR Friday. In a statement, her film company says the filmmaker and artist "died from a cancer at her home in the night of March 29, 2019, surrounded by her family and friends."
As a director, Varda had a photographer's eye for capturing striking images — a skill she often used to accomplish the feat of allowing her stories to seem as if they told themselves. But behind the camera, a master was at work.
Varda released her first film, La Pointe Courte, in 1955, on a shoestring budget and with no formal training. She even claimed not to have seen very many films before writing and directing what is now seen as a classic of cinema.
Varda may have lacked experience, but as she started out in her 20s, she believed that while other arts had progressed to new heights, films were still telling stories the way they always had.
"Literature had changed, painting had changed, culture. And from what I knew, the movie had been just illustrating stories, illustrating books," Varda said in 2015. "I could see that the feeling was just to illustrate, when I thought, 'It should be radical.' "
By making La Pointe Courte, historian Georges Sadoul said, Varda created "truly the first film of the nouvelle vague."
La Pointe Courte tells the story of a Parisian couple visiting the husband's modest hometown, a small fishing village. As the relatively simple story unfolds, viewers can feel a guiding intelligence through Varda's meticulous staging and framing of shots. Shot in black and white, two main narratives emerge, much as in William Faulkner's The Wild Palms, Varda's inspiration for the film.
"Varda's authorial control over both scriptwriting and directing, the exclusive use of location shooting, the mixing of professional and nonprofessional actors — all of this was groundbreaking in early 1950s France," Ginette Vincendeau wrote for Criterion in 2008.
To form her unorthodox approach, Varda instructed her actors to mute their emotions; she spurned artificial lighting; she also allowed off-camera sounds to buzz in and out of dialogue — stylistic touches that became mainstays for the new wave, a movement that includes esteemed directors such as Jean-Luc Godard, François Truffaut and Alain Resnais.
"Varda is sometimes referred to as the godmother of the French New Wave," Roger Ebert wrote about Varda in 2012. "I have been guilty of that myself. Nothing could be more unfair. Varda is its very soul, and only the fact that she is a woman, I fear, prevented her from being routinely included with Godard, Truffaut, Resnais, Chabrol, Rivette, Rohmer and for that matter her husband Jacques Demy."
Over the years, appreciation for Varda's work has only grown. In 2017, she was awarded an honorary Oscar for lifetime achievement. That followed her Palme d'honneur, a lifetime award from the 2015 Cannes Film Festival.
As she explored her art, Varda kept a steady eye on important social themes, particularly the role of women. And she frequently turned her lens onto revolutionary ideas, filming in Cuba in 1963 (for 1971's Salut les Cubains) and making a short documentary about the Black Panthers in 1968.
"All life is about borders. Language borders, ethnic borders, etc.," Varda said in 2015. "And in the cinema, I tried to erase borders, or make them smooth: between documentary and fiction; black and white and color; cinema and art."
Varda's well-respected films range over decades, from 1962's Cléo from 5 to 7 and 1965's Le Bonheur to 1985's Vagabond — the story of a young woman living alone, constantly on the move.
Cléo is seen as an icon of the new wave, telling the story of a young pop star who meditates on beauty, femininity and objectification — all while rushing through Paris and awaiting the results of a biopsy that could tell her whether she will die from cancer.
In 2017, Varda co-directed Faces Places — a project that paired her with the installation artist JR, as the unlikely pair (with a 55-year age difference) traveled to small towns and villages in France and treated the locals like larger-than-life personalities.
"We chose normal people that we met, I would say, people with no power," Varda told NPR. "That was the point. The thing was, can we be person-to-person, and can we put the meeting as the main action? Meeting, listening, enjoying to meet."
Varda turned the camera on herself for several projects, including the autobiographical The Beaches of Agnès of 2008 and Varda by Agnès, which came out this year.
Born Arlette Varda in Brussels in 1928, Varda changed her name as she embarked on her career in art. While she is often associated with the Parisian arts scene, she also spent time in Los Angeles, where she moved in the late 1960s along with her husband, the late director Jacques Demy.
"I became in love with that strange city," she later said. "And right away, it smelled so much [of] cinema, that I had to work.'
Even in Varda's autobiographical film, she turned the camera on others.
"Varda teaches us how to understand our lives," the critic John Powers said on NPR in 2009. "We start not with our inner feelings, but with the people and places that matter to us. That's why the film brims with generous portraits of the people who matter to her — the bakers next door, filmmaker Chris Marker, even her Hollywood pal Zalman King, the softcore impresario behind the cringeful Red Shoe Diaries."
Powers concluded, "Looking back over the 55 years of Varda's film career, it's tempting to say that she's the most distinguished living woman filmmaker. But that would be to insult her with faint praise. She's one of the most distinguished filmmakers, period."
NPR's Elizabeth Blair contributed to this report.
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