Bourvil(1917-1970)
- Actor
- Writer
- Music Department
At the age of three, André Zacharie Raimbourg and his family moved to a
town in the region of Normandy called Bourville. He finished school at
the age of 15 and began to work as a baker. He was already playing
harmonica, mandoline and cornet when he engaged himself in a village
band. In the beginning of 1940 while in the army making music-hall show
for the troops, he changed his name into Andrel like his idol Fernandel from
whom he was singing the songs. He began to write his own songs, making
a name by himself, and so in 1942 took a new name, further from
"Fernandel": Bourvil(le). He was recognized as a stand-up comic, dressed
as a farmer grown too fast for the shirt he wears, hair coming down on
his forehead, a simple minded but crafty naive. At the end of the war
the radio extended his fame. His first parts on the screen were based
only on this character. It's only in 1956 with The Crossing of Paris (1956) of Claude Autant-Lara that
he really began to give his real potential as an actor on the screen.
His greatest popular successes will come under the direction of
Gérard Oury.