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Charles Martinelli as Porthos

French postcard in the Les Vedettes de l'Écran series by Editions Filma, no. 123. Photo: Pathé Consortium Cinéma. Charles Martinelli as Porthos in Les Trois Mousquetaires/The Three Musketeers (Henri Diamant-Berger 1921).

 

Charles Martinelli (1882-1954) was a French actor, who became famous for his interpretation of Porthos in Les trois mousquetaires (1921).

 

Charles Martinelli, whose real name was Charles Martinet, was born in Paris on 10 April 1882. He started out as actor and singer, performing Panurge by Massenet and playing in Boubouroche by Georges Courteline. For then years he was the Chair of the Union des Artistes Français. According to IMDb, his first film part was in Robert Boudrioz’ Le petit poucet (1920), produced by Abel Gance. The year 1920 might be a mistake though, as the French magazine Cinéa of July 1922 announced that Martinelli would start to play the ogre while Christiane Delval played Tom Thumb. It also remarked Martinelli was already known from his part of Porthos in Les trois mousquetaires (1921).

 

Indeed, it seems that Martinelli had his real breakthrough with the French historical adventure film Les trois mousquetaires (1921), directed by Henri Diamant-Berger and adapted from Alexandre Dumas père’s classic novel, published in 1844. The script by Auguste Macquet follows the classic novel by Alexandre Dumas père very faithfully. Martinelli played the good-hearted, rotund Porthos, opposite Aimé Simon-Girard as D’Artagnan, Henri Rollan as Athos, Pierre de Guingand as Aramis, Edouard de Max as Richelieu, Pierrette Madd as Constance, Claude Merelle as Mylady De Winter, and Armand Bernard as Planchet. Les trois mousquetaires had the gigantic budget of 2,5 million French francs. It has wonderful performances, great looking sets (partly filmed on locations as the Chenonceau castle, Chartres and the Pérouges citadel), and authentic recreations of 17th-century costumes. Responsible for sets and costumes was the French reputed architect and designer Robert Mallet-Stevens. It was divided into one-hour chapters, designed to be released as a serial in consecutive weeks over a three-month period. This silent super-serial was produced by Pathé Frères. Parallel to Diamant-Berger’s version, Fred Niblo shot a rival version in the US starring Douglas Fairbanks as D’Artagnan The Three Musketeers (Fred Niblo, 1921). Though entertaining, it was much more loosely adapted. The success of Les trois mousquetaires was aided by an arrangement with United Artists that kept Fairbanks’s The Three Musketeers from being distributed in France and much of Europe.

 

All copies of the 1921 version were thought to be destroyed by the Nazis during the Second World War, but in 1995 a print of it was rediscovered and remastered into a new version. It was already the second adaptation of the famous adventure novel by Alexandre Dumas père, after the first adaptation in 1913, but it wouldn’t be the last either. In 1933 Henri Diamant-Berger made a new, sound version of Les trois mousquetaires. While Thomy Bourdelle now played Porthos, Aimé Simon-Girard starred again as D' Artagnan, Henri Rollan returned as Athos, and Henri Baudin also reprised his role as Le comte de Rochefort.

 

The succes of the 1921 version pushed Pathé in filming Dumas’ sequel Vingt ans après as well, which was released in 1922 and was again directed by Diamant-Berger. Martinelli remained as Porthos, and Rolland, Guingand and Bernard returned, but D’Artagnan was played by Jean Yonnel. Martinelli remained attached to Diamant-Berger’s movies in 1921-23, mostly comedies. He had the lead in the adaptation of the play Boubouroche (1921, the play he had starred in on stage before as well), and also acted in Le mauvais garçon (1923), Gonzague (1923), Jim Bougne, boxeur (1923), L’accordeur (1923) and L’affaire de la rue de Lourcine (1923), all starring Maurice Chevalier, and Le roi de la vitesse (1923), starring Pierre de Guingand. In those films several of the actors of Les trois mousquetaires and Vingts ans après often returned, such as Pierrette Madd, Marguerite Moreno and Louis Préfils, but also popular vaudeville comedians joined like Georges Milton and Florelle, starting their film career here.

 

Martinelli then did three comedies with Robert Saidreau: Ma tante d’Honfleur (1923), A la gare (1923, released 1925) and Le fil à la patte (1923), all with Armand Bernard. In 1924 Martinelly played the mad scientist in Paris qui dort, René Clair’s mad cap science fiction film about the whole of Paris transformed in a state of Sleeping Beauty-like sleep, except for a few odd outsiders, including the man on the Eiffel Tower, played by Henri Rollan, and a pilot (Albert Préjean) and his passengers. Préjean had started his career in Diamant-Berger’s Les trois mousquetaires and had become a regular of his comedies as well. Paris qui dort was also produced by Henri Diamant-Berger’s company Films Diamant.

 

After that Martinelli did one last film in the silent era, playing Farigoule in La Tournée Farigoule (Marcel Manchez 1926), with Madeleine Guitty and Jane Pierson. In the sound era Martinelli played in three films of the 1930s. He was the head of police in G.W. Pabst’s Don Quichotte (1932, released 1933), starring Feodor Chaliapine as Don Quichotte and Dorville as Sancho Panza. He played the emperor in the Franco-German coproduction Tambour battant (André Becler & Arthur Robison, 1933), starring Georges Rigaud, Josseline Gaël and Françoise Rosay. His last part was in the comedy Un fichu métier (1938) by Pierre-Jean Ducis, starring Lucien Baroux. Charles Martinelli died in Paris on 11 August 1954.

 

Charles Martinelli was married to singer Germaine Jobert (1887-1964) in 1908. In the interbellum years, Germaine Martinelli was a highly acclaimed concert singer. Their son, Jean Martinelli, born 1909, was for 21 years sociétaire of the Comédie Française, and afterward had an excellent career in private theatres, film, and television. He died in 1983.

 

Sources: IMDb, Wikipedia, www.cineressources.net/images/periodiques/o000/501.pdf, www.cineressources.net/recherche_t_r.php?type=PNP&pk=..., fr.groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/schubertiades/conversation..., www.artlyriquefr.fr/personnages/Martinelli Germaine.html

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Uploaded on June 8, 2014
Taken on January 29, 2012