Historical Dictionary of French Cinema

PRINCE, CHARLES

Prince, Charles: translation

(1872-1933)
Actor and director. Born Charles Prince Seigneur, Prince, as he would be known onscreen, signed on atPathéstudios in 1908 and went on to become one of the great comic stars of the silent screen. Prince's best-known screen character was Rigadin, and he appeared in a series of comic films that ran between 1909 and 1918 and included such titles asRigadin(1909),Rigadin face à Napoléon(1910),Rigadin débute au music-hall(1911),Rigadin aux Balkans(1912),Rigadin président de la République(1913),Rigadin veut faire du cinéma(1913),Rigadin et l'homme qui l'assassina(1914),Un marriage à la baïonette(1915),Rigadin et les deux dactylos(1916),Une nuit tragique de Rigadin(1917),Rigadin a fait un riche marriage(1918),La Femme de Rigadin(1918),Rigadin et le code de l'honneur(1919), andRigadin dans les Alpes(1919).All told, there were more than one hundred films in theRigadinseries. All films in the series were directed byGeorges Monca. TheRigadinseries accounted for most of Prince's contribution to the cinema. It was internationally very successful, although the character appeared under different names in different countries. The series was called theMoritzseries in Germany, theTartufiniseries in Italy, and theWhifflesseries in England, for example. Prince also appeared in a number of other silent films including Monca'sLe Contrôleur des wagon-lits(1913),La Mariée recalcitrante(1916),Les Femmes collantes(1920),Chouquette et son as(1920), all which Prince codirected, Monca'sUn monsieur qui suit les dames(1908),L'Armoire normande(1908),Ce que femme veut(1909),Le Bon roi Dagobert(1911),Les Surprises du divorce(1912),Le Roi Koko(1913),Monsieur le directeur(1913), andLes Fiancés héroïques(1915), Charles Esquier'sSanatorium pour maigrir(1909),Albert Capellaniand Michel Carré'sFleur de pavé(1909), Yves Mirande'sLe Petit qui a faim(1909), Henri Germain'sLa Malle du peintre(1910), and Robert Péguy'sEmbrassez-moi(1928). He also starred in and directedSi jamais je te pince(1920). In terms of his box-office success, Prince was the only comic star during the silent era to rival Pathé's other great star,Max Linder. His comedy, however, was much more in the vein ofRomeo BossettiandAndré Deedthan that of Linder, who had an air of elegance to his slapstick.
Prince appeared in a handful of sound films before his death. These include Joe Francis and Jean Toulot'sLe Tampin du Capiston(1930), Péguy and Erich Schmidt'sSon altesse l'amour(1931), Maurice Toureur'sPartir(1931), Pierre Colombier'sSa meilleure cliente(1932), Alexandre Ryder'sL'Âne de Buridan(1932), and Maurice Cammage'sLe Coq du régiment(1933), his final film. Prince had supporting roles in these films, and it is for his work during the silent era that he is best remembered.

  1. prince, charlesPrince Charles translation Actor and director. Born Charles Prince Seigneur Prince as he would be known onscreen signed on at Pathstrong studios in and went on to become...Guide to cinema
  2. prince charlesпринц Чарльз принц Уэльсский р. сын Елизаветы II son of Elizabeth II prince of Wales...Англо-русский универсальный дополнительный практический словарь И. Мостицкого