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French actor and film director From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
André Calmettes (1861–1942) was a French actor and film director.
After being a theatre actor for twenty years, he joined the society Le Film d'Art , founded in 1908 by the novelist and editor, Paul Lafitte at the urging of the Sociétaires of the Comédie-Française.
That same year, disturbed by the noise of the spectators, he suggested that films should have musical accompaniment. One of the first composers to produce music especially designed for a film was Camille Saint-Saëns, who arranged a piano score for Calmette's The Assassination of the Duke of Guise. Originally the music was played in the theatre, but Calmette later found a way to put musicians behind the screen and synchronize their playing with the film.
In the three years from 1909 to 1912, he gave a more theatrical touch to his work by casting famous stage actors such as Sarah Bernhardt, Réjane and Mounet-Sully to do adaptations of classic literary works, both French and English.
After 1913, he returned to the stage himself. He appeared in one film, Le Petit Chose, by André Hugon.[1]
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