Irène Jacob
- Actress
- Executive
This beautiful, dark-haired French actress made a hit with a supporting
role in her first film, as the piano teacher in Louis Malle's "Au
revoir, les enfants" (1987). Educated in London and Geneva, and a Paris
resident since the age of 18, Jacob became a promising starlet with her
Malle success and followed up with another small role in Jacques
Rivette's "La bande des quatre/The Gang of Four" (1989). 5Stardom (and
a Cannes Film Festival Best Actress award) arrived with Jacob's dual
role as two women whose lives are mysteriously linked in Krzysztof
Kieslowski's psychological drama "The Double Life of Veronique" (1991).
She ventured to the US for a ronantic comedy, "Trusting Beatrice"
(1991), fittingly, about a young French woman's arrival in the US.
After the small film "The Van Gogh Wake" (1993), she played the
ill-fated mother in Agnieszka Holland's touching and acclaimed "The
Secret Garden" (1993). Several more small French films followed, but it
took a reunion with Kieslowski to jump-start Jacob's career again. In
his "Red/Rouge" (1994), the final segment of his "Three Colors" trilogy
(and his swan song), Jacob starred as a Swiss fashion model who meets a
cynical aging ex-judge (played by Jean-Louis Trintignant) after she
runs over his dog. In the film, she served as an emotional and
spiritual curative for the old man; the second time, Kieslowski
employed Jacob as a woman who offers a man consolation and mystery.
Jacob followed up as a religious devotee in Michaelango Antonioni's
episodic "Beyond the Clouds/Par-dela les nuages" (1995), then ventured
to England to play Desdemona to Laurence Fishburne's "Othello" (also
1995). Jacob has several foreign-made films in the can which have not
yet been released in the US: she plays an East Indian beauty with
Willem Defoe and Sam Neill in "Victory" (filmed in 1994), an ill-fated
vacationer in "Fugueuses/Runaway" and a French actress in 1948 who
befriends a mysterious tramp (Stephen Rea) in "All Men Are Mortal"
(both shown at Cannes in 1995).