Jacqueline Audry (September 25, 1908 – June 22, 1977) was a French film director who began ****** films in post-World War II France and specialised in literary adaptations.She was the first commercially successful female director of post-war France.Audry directed The Pit of Loneliness (Olivia, 1951), based on Dorothy Bussy's 1950 semi-autobiographical novel, Olivia.[4] Set in an all-girls boarding school, The Pit of Loneliness depicts a lesbian love story between a schoolgirl and her headmistress.[6] At the time, the film was very controversial and was censored in the United States and the United Kingdom.[6] Edwige Feuillère was nominated for a BAFTA award for Best Foreign Actress for her part as Mlle. Julie, the headmistress.[7] The film has been called a "landmark of lesbian representation".[8] She frequently collaborated with her sister, the novelist and screenwriter Colette Audry.[9]Audry's film style was traditional and at odds with the French New Wave.[5] Her films had a feminist slant however.[5] Many of them had central female characters and they often gave a radical view of gender roles and female sexuality.[2][5][10] Audry died in a road accident in Poissy, Yvelines, France.
米歇尔·摩根、米歇尔·西蒙
埃玛妞·丽娃、洛朗·特兹弗
Madeleine Rousset、玛格丽特·莫雷诺
Bruno Alias、Carole André
丹尼尔·德洛姆、费尔南·格拉韦
阿莱蒂、Frank Villard
Pierre Meyrand、阿努克·费尔雅克
加比·莫尔莱、米歇尔·西蒙
蒂尔达·萨玛、罗歇·皮戈
妲妮·罗宾、费尔南·格拉韦
费尔南·格拉韦、Andrée Debar
Marcelle Chantal、Micheline Presle
米歇尔·摩根、米歇尔·西蒙
埃玛妞·丽娃、洛朗·特兹弗
Madeleine Rousset、玛格丽特·莫雷诺
Bruno Alias、Carole André
丹尼尔·德洛姆、费尔南·格拉韦
阿莱蒂、Frank Villard
加比·莫尔莱、米歇尔·西蒙
蒂尔达·萨玛、罗歇·皮戈
妲妮·罗宾、费尔南·格拉韦
费尔南·格拉韦、Andrée Debar