Interview with Agnès Jaoui

Rendez-vous with Agnès Jaoui

Each stage of her career is in line with Agnès Jaoui's  commitments and vision. Whether as an actress, screenwriter, director or singer, she strives to probe society and psychology through the characters she creates or plays. It was therefore a complete artist, as intelligent as she is funny, who came to meet festival-goers today. Alook back at some of the highlights.

Agnès Jaoui looks back on her desire to be an actress. In telling her story, she lingers on a conversation that took place during her first visit to Cannes when she was a student.

I came there in a caravan with some friends. One day I had a coffee with a guy who said to me: "You're too smart to be an actress". I replied: "So if I'm too smart, I'll be an actress. There's the object of desire of the actress who can't be intelligent. I couldn't give up this profession, nor my vision of the world. Even if it meant making a few people lose their temper.

From actress to scriptwriter: the birth of the duo with Jean-Pierre Bacri

We had a lot of outrage in common, the feeling of not thinking like the majority. We often had the same anger and it was a driving force the first time we wrote. We also wanted to act in our films because when we wrote for others, like  Alain Resnais, we still felt the frustration of not acting.

The moment of realization

It was when I saw the films that I didn't like, like when you say to yourself, "Oh, I didn't like the adaptation of that novel. I realised that I couldn't find what I had imagined. It was also a question of maturity. Writing meant becoming an adult.

“Directing meant becoming a parent, carrying others, mothering them, accompanying them. I felt legitimate.”

On directing… by an actress

Being an actress helps. I know how actors work. Well, not all actors work in the same way. Some need a lot of freedom and others need to be very guided. Then there are directors who need to work with violence, to push things to the limit.

Greater diversity

The role of the artist is to show women, men, places that you would not have looked at first. And through their prism and by dint of making us see them, lead us to find them beautiful.

Her relationship to the body and the screen

When I was younger and asked to be naked, I didn't like it, I felt like an aggression, like a rape. But now, for me, it's a militant act.

About his often melancholic characters

I think melancholy is my middle name. I have always written roles that are facets of myself. It escapes me a little but I write characters who have complexity, desires and disgusts, ambitions. There are films where it's complicated to be an actress because the role is only to be a man's stooge.