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    Darling Légitimus

    1907-11-21 (116 years old) in Le Carbet, Martinique

    Mathilda Marie Berthilde Paruta (21 November 1907 – 7 December 1999), better known as Darling Légitimus, was a French actress. In 1983, she received the Volpi Cup for Best Actress for her performance in the film Sugar Cane Alley. Born on 21 November 1907 at Le Carbet in Martinique, she spent her early years in Caracas, Venezuela. Mathilda Paruta arrived in Paris, France, at age of 16, wanting to become a dancer. She met Victor-Etienne Légitimus, son of the government deputy, Hegesippe Jean Légitimus, and went on to become his lifelong companion and bear him five children. Known for a long time as Miss Darling, she later chose to go by the name of Darling Legitimus. She performed as a dancer in La Revue Nègre (1925) with Josephine Baker, and posed for Picasso as well as for sculptor Paul Belmondo, father of Jean-Paul Belmondo, the actor. During the 1930s, Darling wrote, composed and sang numerous Caribbean songs such as Biguine and Mazurka. She often performed alongside known musicians of the era, including "Pe En Kin Sosso" and his band. She also performed in plays by Jean Genet (Les Nègres) and Aimé Césaire. She was directed on the big screen by Raymond Rouleau in Les Sorcieres de Salem (The Crucible) alongside Simone Signoret and Yves Montand, and Le Salaire de la Peur (Wages of Fear) by Henri Georges Clouzot, with Sacha Guitry, Jean-Claude Brialy and Bernardo Bertolucci. In 1983, at the age of 76, she won the Volpi Cup for the best female interpretation of "The Mostra of Venise", also for her role in La Rue Cases-Nègres (Sugar Cane Alley), directed by her compatriot Euzhan Palcy. During her long life, she was acquainted with a great number of famous actors, among them Arletty, Fernandel, Marlon Brando and Pierre Brasseur. She also took part in numerous ORTF (Office de Radio-diffusion de la Television Française) productions, of which a telefilm by Jean-Christophe Averty, Les verts Paturages (The Green Pastures, written by Marc Connelly), was produced. She died on 7 December 1999 at Kremlin-Bicetre in the Val de Marne near Paris, in France, without any more acting roles after Sugar Cane Alley in spite of hopes of her nomination and rewards. The writer, Calixthe Beyala and Caribbean actor Luc Saint-Eloy, representatives of "Liberté" collective came up on stage at the César ceremony in 2000, to claim one of the largest presence on French television screens and to pay her a public tribute, since the organizers had "forgotten" to name Darling as one of the previous year's great losses. Source: Article "Darling Légitimus" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.

    Movies

    poster
    Sugar Cane Alley
    67 %|Sep 21, 1983
    Drama, Family
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    La bande du Rex
    0 %|Apr 29, 1980
    Drama
    poster
    The Toilets Were Closed from the Inside
    52.86 %|Jan 7, 1976
    Crime, Comedy
    poster
    La Dernière Bourrée à Paris
    10 %|Oct 31, 1973
    Comedy
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    Églantine
    60 %|Feb 25, 1972
    Drama, Comedy
    poster
    The Ghostly Rental
    68.33 %|Apr 17, 1965
    TV Movie, Fantasy, Horror
    poster
    Les verts pâturages
    50 %|Dec 31, 1964
    poster
    The Fire Within
    76.24 %|Oct 15, 1963
    Drama
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    The Doll
    50 %|Nov 7, 1962
    Comedy, Science Fiction
    poster
    Women Are Like That
    54 %|Sep 20, 1960
    Crime, Thriller
    poster
    The Witches of Salem
    70 %|Apr 26, 1957
    Drama, History
    poster
    A Missionary
    0 %|Dec 2, 1955
    Drama
    poster
    Flesh and the Woman
    41 %|Jun 8, 1954
    Drama
    poster
    Tourbillon
    0 %|Oct 2, 1953
    Crime, Drama
    poster
    The Wages of Fear
    80.36 %|Apr 22, 1953
    Drama, Thriller, Adventure
    poster
    The Road to Damascus
    0 %|Dec 5, 1952
    poster
    Three Feet in a Bed
    56 %|Apr 19, 1950
    Comedy
    poster
    Les trois cousines
    0 %|Dec 10, 1947
    poster
    Le Bateau à soupe
    60 %|Feb 19, 1947
    Drama
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    A Friend Will Come Tonight
    55 %|Apr 9, 1946
    Drama, War

    Series

    poster
    Discorama
    0 %|Feb 4, 1959
    Talk