Dominique Sanda(I)
- Actress
Dominique Sanda was born in 1951, in Paris, France. When she was 16,
she left her upper-class family and married, but divorced two years
later. She found a temporary job as a Vogue model, when
Robert Bresson gave her the
starring part in his absorbing drama
A Gentle Woman (1969); she was
quite impressive as a young woman who commits suicide when she finds
out that her husband is unable to love her for what she really is. She
was then offered the female lead in
Vittorio De Sica's
The Garden of the Finzi-Continis (1970),
as the provocative daughter of a rich Jewish family. Afterwards, she
worked with Bernardo Bertolucci on
the much-discussed
The Conformist (1970), as the
sensual wife of an anti-fascist professor, and co-starred with
Paul Newman in
John Huston's spy thriller,
The MacKintosh Man (1973). She
worked again with Bertolucci in the epic,
1900 (1976), and won the Cannes
Film Festival Best Actress Prize for her performance in
Mauro Bolognini's
The Inheritance (1976),
as an Italian patriarch's daughter-in-law. She gave one more
unforgettable performance in Jacques Demy's
original musical,
A Room in Town (1982),
as a femme fatale. Today, in her seventies, she is still busy, appearing
in international films and TV series.