
Director
Edmond T. Gréville
Born 1906 · Nice, France
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Edmond T. Gréville (real name Edmond Gréville Thonger, 20 June 1906 Nice – 26 May 1966, Nice) was a French film director. The son of Franco-British parents, his father a Protestant pastor, Gréville began his career as a film journalist and critic. In parallel with a few acting performances in some silent films and in the first talkie of René Clair, Sous les toits de Paris (1930), he directed his first short films. His first experience of directing had been on the shooting of Abel Gance's Napoléon in 1927. He had then worked as an assistant director, notably on the English film Piccadilly, L'Arlésienne (directed by Jacques de Baroncelli), Augusto Genina's Prix de beauté ( with Louise Brooks) and Abel Gance's La Fin du Monde. Between 1930 and 1940 he directed several French films - Le Train des suicidés (1931), Remous (1934) with Françoise Rosay (a social-realist film on the sensitive sexual issue of impotence), and two comedy musical films Princesse Tam Tam (1935) with Josephine Baker, and Gypsy Melody (1936), with Lupe Velez. In Britain again, he filmed Mademoiselle Docteur with Dita Parlo and John Loder, and Menaces (1938) with Mireille Balin and Erich von Stroheim, playing an Austrian refugee who commits suicide following the Anschluss. With a heavy atmosphere charged with eroticism which characterises his films, Gréville imposed his independence and original style on the cinema of the time. He stopped directing films during the Second World War and the Occupation - xenophobia and anti-Semitism ruined or put a stop to some careers, among film-makers those of Léonide Moguy and Pierre Chenal for example, both French Jews, and the half-British Gréville, and took away production and distribution companies belonging to Jews like the father and son distributors Siriztky. In 1948 he made a film on the subject of resistance and collaboration in the Dutch film Niet tevergeefs. The same year he made a film with Carole Landis, Noose. In Le Port du désir (1954) he directed Jean Gabin as a captain confronted by an unscrupulous smuggler and torn by his love for a young woman who is also loved by a younger man. In Gréville's last years he made Beat Girl (1959) with Adam Faith and a horror film The Hands of Orlac (1960) with Mel Ferrer. His last film was L'Accident (1963) with Magali Noël based on a Frédéric David novel. In May 1966, Edmond Greville died in hospital in Nice, thought to be the result of complications following a car accident. Description above from the Wikipedia article Edmond T. Gréville, licensed under CC-BY-SA,full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Directed
What a Man!
Director · 1939

The Fire Triangle
Director · 1932

L'Arlésienne
Assistant Director · 1930

Beat Girl
Director · 1960

Forty Years
Director · 1938

Under Secret Orders
Director · 1937
Pleasures of Paris
Director · 1934

A Woman in the Night
Director · 1943

Miss Europe
Assistant Director · 1930

House on the Waterfront
Director · 1955

Woman of Evil
Director · 1947

Brief Ecstasy
Director · 1937

Passionnelle
Director · 1947

Marchand d'amour
Director · 1935

Dorothy Looks for Love
Director · 1945

The Train of Suicides
Director · 1931

Secret Lives
Director · 1937

Whirlpool
Director · 1935
Writing

Horror Castle
Screenplay · 1963

Woman of Evil
Writer · 1947

Passionnelle
Screenplay · 1947

The Train of Suicides
Writer · 1931

Secret Lives
Screenplay · 1937

Threats
Screenplay · 1940

The Romantic Age
Adaptation · 1949

Other Side of Paradise
Screenplay · 1953

But Not in Vain
Writer · 1948

Temptation
Writer · 1959

The Hands of Orlac
Writer · 1960
