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Claude Barma
Claude Barma
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Claude Barma (3 November 1918, in Nice – 30 August 1992, in Paris), was a French[1] director and screenwriter, and an early creator of French television programmes.

Biography

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After studying electrical engineering, he entered television in 1946 with the drama Chambre 34, his directorial debut.

On 24 February 1950, he produced the first live French television show by transmitting part of Marivaux's Le Jeu de l'amour et du hasard and the Comédie-Française.

His first series followed in 1950, Agence Nostradamus, which was also the first series on French television.

In 1955, he staged a trial court scripted by Peter Desgraupes and Dumayet Peter (producers of the series). En votre âme et conscience was an original series, designed for small-screen drama, taking place entirely in a court where the camera filmed uninterrupted.

In 1959, the television drama Les Trois Mousquetaires was adapted by Barma for live transmission, with the role of D'Artagnan played by the young Jean-Paul Belmondo, who would later be known for his roles in À bout de souffle and Classe tous risques.

In the early 1960s, he adapted three Shakespeare plays: Macbeth in 1959, Hamlet in 1960 and Othello in 1962 .

In 1967, Les Enquêtes du commissaire Maigret depicted the popular character Jules Maigret, created by Georges Simenon. Barma oversaw the series until 1981.

Claude Barma died in 1992, and was buried in Ars-en-Ré in Charente-Maritime.

Major works

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  • 1991 : Le Manège de Pauline (TV) 1991 : The Armoury of Pauline (TV)
  • 1991 : Le Squale (TV) 1991 : The Squale (TV)
  • 1990 : Coma dépassé (TV) 1990 : Coma exceeded (TV)
  • 1989 : Les Sirènes de minuit (TV) 1989 : The Sirens of Midnight (TV)
  • 1985 : Hôtel de police, série TV 1985 : Hall police TV series
  • 1984 : Emmenez-moi au théâtre : Amphitryon 38 1984 : Take me to the theater: Amphitryon 38
  • 1967 - 1982 : Les Enquêtes du commissaire Maigret (45 épisodes) In 1967 - 1 982 : The Investigation of Inspector Maigret (45 episodes)
  • 1979 : Orient-Express (mini-série TV) 1979 : Orient-Express (TV miniseries)
  • 1977 : Dossiers : Danger immédiat, série télévisée 1977 : Records: Danger, television series
  • 1972 : La Tragédie de Vérone (TV) 1972 : The Tragedy of Verona (TV)
  • 1972 : Les Rois maudits (TV) 1972 : The Accursed Kings (TV)
  • 1969 : D'Artagnan (TV) 1969 : D'Artagnan (TV)
  • 1966 : Corsaires et flibustiers (série TV) 1966 : Corsairs and pirates (TV series)
  • 1965 : Belphégor ou le Fantôme du Louvre (TV) 1965 : Belphegor or the Phantom of the Louvre (TV)
  • 1963 : L'inspecteur Leclerc enquête (TV) 1963 : The inquiry inspector Leclerc (TV)
  • 1962 : La nuit des rois (TV) 1962 : Twelfth Night (TV)
  • 1962 : Les Parisiennes (séquence Françoise ) 1962 : Les Parisiennes (sequence Françoise)
  • 1960 : Cyrano de Bergerac pour la RTF 1960 : Cyrano de Bergerac for the RTF
  • 1960 : Du côté de l'enfer (TV) 1960 : On the side of Hell (TV)
  • 1959 : Les Trois Mousquetaires 1959 : The Three Musketeers
  • 1958 : Les Femmes des autres 1958 : The Women of other
  • 1957 : En votre âme et conscience, de Pierre Desgraupes et Pierre Dumayet 1957 : In all conscience, to Desgraupes Pierre and Pierre Dumayet
  • 1957 : Casino de Paris 1957 : Casino de Paris
  • 1954 : Nous irons à Valparaiso (TV)
  • 1953 : Madame Bovary 1953 : Madame Bovary
  • 1951 : The Turkey
  • 1950 : The Gamblers

Theatre

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  • 1956 : Monsieur Masure de Claude Magnier [fr], Comédie-Wagram 1956 : Mr. Hovel Claude Magnier, Comedy Wagram
  • 1960 : Un garçon d'honneur d' Antoine Blondin et Paul Guimard d'après Le Crime de Lord Arthur Saville d' Oscar Wilde, Théâtre Marigny 1960 : A groomsman to Antoine Blondin and Paul Guimard from The Crime of Lord Arthur Saville of Oscar Wilde, Theatre Marigny
  • 1960 : Hamlet de William Shakespeare, Grand Théâtre de la Cité Carcassonne 1960 : Hamlet by William Shakespeare, Grand Theatre de la Cite Carcassonne

Awards

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  • 1957 : Grand Prix de la télévision française 1957 Grand Prix French television

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Claude Barma was a French director and screenwriter renowned as a pioneer of French television. Born on November 3, 1918, in Nice, he began his career with short films in the 1940s before joining French television in 1946, where he directed one of the medium's earliest programs, Chambre 34. In 1950, he achieved a milestone by directing France's first live television broadcast, a performance of Marivaux's Le Jeu de l’amour et du hasard from the Comédie-Française. Over the following decades, Barma became a central figure in French television drama, specializing in theatrical adaptations, historical feuilletons, courtroom recreations, and police procedurals. He directed numerous episodes of the long-running judicial series En votre âme et conscience during the 1950s and 1960s, as well as acclaimed literary adaptations including Les Trois Mousquetaires (1959), Macbeth (1959), and Cyrano de Bergerac (1960). His work extended to iconic serials such as the fantastique Belphégor ou le fantôme du Louvre (1965), the swashbuckling Le Chevalier de Maison-Rouge (1963) and Corsaires et flibustiers (1966), and the landmark historical miniseries Les Rois Maudits (1972–1973), adapted from Maurice Druon's novels. Barma also launched and directed multiple installments of Les enquêtes du commissaire Maigret starring Jean Richard between 1967 and the 1970s, contributing to the enduring popularity of detective fiction on French television. His prolific output helped shape the golden age of French television dramatics through the 1980s, and he remained active until his death on August 30, 1992, in Clichy-la-Garenne. Barma was the father of television producer Catherine Barma.

Early Life

Birth and Education

Claude Barma was born on 3 November 1918 in Nice, Alpes-Maritimes, France. Before entering the field of television, he studied electrical engineering. He transitioned to a television career in 1946.

Entry into Television

Joining RTF and First Directorial Work

Claude Barma joined French television in 1946. His technical background contributed to his early interest in the medium of television. His first television directing work occurred that same year with the television drama Chambre 34. This marked Barma's first credited work as a director in the nascent French television landscape. Barma's initial efforts centered on live drama production, where he directed dramatic programs broadcast live to viewers in the immediate post-war period. These early live broadcasts formed the foundation of his career in television direction.

Early Live Productions and Innovations

Claude Barma contributed to the emergence of live television drama in France during the early 1950s, directing productions that adapted theatrical works for the new medium. In February 1950, he oversaw the live transmission of Marivaux's comedy Le Jeu de l'amour et du hasard, performed by actors from the Comédie-Française and broadcast from Paris on the single French television channel available at the time. This early effort reflected the technical and artistic challenges of capturing continuous stage action for television viewers, relying on real-time direction to maintain dramatic flow without interruption. Barma's work extended these live formats into literary adaptations, notably with his 1953 direction of Madame Bovary, based on Gustave Flaubert's novel. The black-and-white production, lasting approximately 100 minutes, starred Luce Feyrer as Emma Bovary alongside Yves Vincent and Jacques Clancy, and was co-adapted by Barma with Jacques Chabannes. It presented the story in a dreamlike, romantic style that sought to evoke the novel's introspective atmosphere through television's visual constraints. In his early dramas, Barma explored techniques suited to live broadcasting, including approaches to camera work that supported uninterrupted dramatic progression and fluid transitions between scenes in a multi-camera setup typical of the era. These productions helped shape the evolving language of French television by bridging theater and the emerging medium.

Pioneering Achievements

First French TV Series and Live Theater Broadcast

Claude Barma achieved two key pioneering milestones in French television during 1950, building on his earlier involvement with RTF. On 24 February 1950, he produced and directed the first live television broadcast of a theater play in France, retransmitting Marivaux’s Le Jeu de l’amour et du hasard performed by the Comédie-Française company directly from the theater. This technical and artistic achievement introduced real-time theater to home viewers and demonstrated television's potential as a medium for cultural dissemination. Later that year, Barma created Agence Nostradamus, regarded as the first French television series and often described as the inaugural roman-feuilleton for the medium in France. The production helped establish serialized narrative formats on French television, contributing to the medium's evolution beyond one-off broadcasts. These initiatives positioned Barma as a foundational figure in shaping early French TV programming and its integration of traditional performing arts with emerging broadcast technology.

Award-Winning Courtroom Drama

Claude Barma was one of the principal directors and producers of En votre âme et conscience, an anthology series scripted by Pierre Desgraupes and Pierre Dumayet that reconstructed historical trials for television audiences and premiered in 1956. The series employed an innovative format in which the action unfolded entirely within a single courtroom set, using continuous filming and live broadcast techniques to create a sense of immediacy and realism. This approach featured codified dramaturgy, including extended interrogations by the presiding judge, successive testimonies from witnesses and experts, presenter summaries, and prolonged fixed shots on symbolic elements such as a clock pendulum during jury deliberation, positioning the spectator as the "thirteenth juror." Barma served as one of the program's principal directors and producers, contributing to its stable and distinctive style through 1967.

Major Television Directing Career

Shakespeare and Classic Adaptations

Claude Barma gained recognition for his ambitious live television adaptations of Shakespearean tragedies and other classic literary works during the late 1950s and early 1960s, a period when he championed the intensity and immediacy of live broadcasting as essential to television drama. These productions, often staged with a theatrical emphasis but adapted to the television medium, built on his prior experience with live formats and frequently featured recurring actors such as Daniel Sorano and Maria Casarès in leading roles. Barma's approach prioritized psychological depth and audience engagement, often employing sober mise-en-scène to highlight character interiority while embracing the risks of live performance, which he compared to a high-stakes contest without safety nets. In 1959, Barma directed a live adaptation of Alexandre Dumas' Les Trois Mousquetaires, broadcast on December 25, 1959, with Jean-Paul Belmondo portraying d'Artagnan and Edmond Beauchamp as Monsieur de Tréville. That same year, he presented Macbeth on October 20, 1959, featuring Daniel Sorano and Maria Casarès in principal roles and favoring restrained staging to foreground the characters' psychological complexity. In 1960, Barma adapted Shakespeare's Hamlet as well as Edmond Rostand's Cyrano de Bergerac, continuing his focus on classic texts suited to the live television format. Barma's Shakespearean work culminated in 1962 with two notable productions. His adaptation of Othello, broadcast live on January 23, 1962 (with only the opening pre-recorded), starred Daniel Sorano as Othello (in blackface), Francine Bergé as Desdemona, and Jean Topart as Iago; the mise-en-scène retained a largely theatrical blocking while incorporating cinematic touches such as close-up monologues to camera and motifs of entrapment inspired by Orson Welles' 1952 film version. That year, he also directed La nuit des rois (Twelfth Night), further extending his series of Shakespeare comedies and tragedies tailored for French television audiences.

Long-Running Crime Series

Barma's extensive involvement in crime drama culminated in his role as a key director and creative influence on the long-running television series Les Enquêtes du commissaire Maigret, an adaptation of Georges Simenon's renowned detective novels starring Jean Richard as Commissaire Jules Maigret. The series premiered in 1967 with the episode Cécile est morte, which Barma directed and co-wrote, and it established a contemporary setting for Maigret's investigations rather than a period recreation. Barma selected Jean Richard for the lead role, marking a departure from the actor's prior comedic work, and guided the production's early direction to capture Simenon's atmospheric style. From 1967 to 1974, Barma directed several episodes (including the premiere and others such as Le Chien jaune, Félicie est là, L'Écluse N°1, and Maigret à l'école), while contributing as a screenwriter to numerous installments. His early oversight helped establish and sustain the program's popularity, with episodes often broadcast on ORTF channels and later Antenne 2, blending faithful adaptations with practical location filming in modern Paris streets. This body of work formed a cornerstone of Barma's television output during the 1960s through 1980s, showcasing his expertise in serialized crime storytelling.

Historical Miniseries and Other Notable Works

Claude Barma continued to make significant contributions to French television through miniseries and other productions, often drawing on literary sources for adaptations that captured large audiences. His 1965 miniseries Belphégor ou le Fantôme du Louvre, adapted from Arthur Bernède's 1927 novel, aired in four episodes on the ORTF's first channel from March 6 to 27, 1965. Directed with a distinctive gothic aesthetic featuring black-and-white photography, low-key lighting, and studio recreations of the Louvre's labyrinthine spaces, the series followed a hooded phantom committing mysterious crimes amid an ambiguous blend of rational police investigation and supernatural elements. It became a major popular phenomenon, averaging 10 million viewers per episode and peaking at 15 million for the finale, establishing itself as a cult classic of 1960s French television. Barma returned to classic literary adaptation with D'Artagnan in 1969, drawing from Alexandre Dumas' works. This production continued his approach to bringing historical adventure narratives to television screens. In 1972, Barma directed Les Rois maudits, a six-episode historical miniseries adapted by Marcel Jullian from the first six novels of Maurice Druon's saga, broadcast on the ORTF's second channel from December 21, 1972, to January 24, 1973. Featuring a prominent cast including Jean Piat as Robert d’Artois, Hélène Duc as Mahaut d’Artois, and Georges Marchal as Philippe IV le Bel, along with music by Georges Delerue, the series employed a sober, theatrical style shot entirely in studio to focus on close-up confrontations, political intrigue, and themes of power and betrayal in medieval France. It achieved strong audience success and occasional controversy over its depiction of violence, earning repeated broadcasts and recognition as an influential precursor to later historical intrigue series. Barma's later works included the 1979 miniseries Orient-Express, the 1985 series Hôtel de police, and additional productions such as Les Sirènes de minuit (1989), Coma dépassé (1990), Le Squale (1991), and Le Manège de Pauline (1991).

Work in Film and Theatre

Cinema Credits

Claude Barma's involvement in feature films remained limited, as his career was overwhelmingly dedicated to television directing, where he pioneered numerous innovations and long-running series. His most notable cinema credit is a segment in the anthology film Les Parisiennes (1962), also known in English as Tales of Paris or Beds and Broads. This comedy-drama consists of four separate sketches depicting various aspects of life and love among Parisian women, with Barma directing the segment featuring dramatic elements and starring Françoise Arnoul. The film was a collaborative effort among several directors including Marc Allégret, Michel Boisrond, and Jacques Poitrenaud. Barma's cinema work also included several short films in the 1940s and early 1950s, such as Chambre 34 (1945) and Les Petites Annonces matrimoniales (1947), before he transitioned primarily to television.

Stage Productions

Claude Barma's involvement in stage productions was limited and occasional compared to his prolific career in television directing. His work in theater primarily occurred in the 1950s and early 1960s, where he served as metteur en scène for a handful of notable productions. In 1956, Barma directed Monsieur Masure, a comedy in three acts and five tableaux by Claude Magnier, which premiered on May 12 at the Comédie-Wagram in Paris. The production featured scenography by Gisèle Tanalias and an original cast including Guy Tréjan, Claude Larue, and Gérard Séty. In 1960, he staged Un garçon d'honneur, adapted by Antoine Blondin and Paul Guimard from Oscar Wilde's short story "Lord Arthur Savile's Crime," at the Théâtre Marigny in Paris. The mise en scène incorporated décors by Léonor Fini. Also in 1960, Barma directed William Shakespeare's Hamlet at the Grand Théâtre de la Cité in Carcassonne as part of the Festival d'art dramatique de la Cité. The production, created on July 9, used a translation by Marcel Pagnol and adaptation by Yves Bonnefoy, with scenography and costumes by Jean-Jacques Gambut, original music by Pierre Maillard-Verger, and collaboration on pantomimes by Jacques Lecoq. The cast included Roger Coggio as Hamlet, Maria Casarès as Gertrude, and Daniel Sorano as Claudius.

Personal Life and Family

Death and Legacy

Passing

Claude Barma died on 30 August 1992 in a hospital in Paris at the age of 73. The French newspaper Le Monde reported his passing the following day, noting that the filmmaker succumbed in a Parisian hospital on that Sunday. No specific cause of death was detailed in contemporary accounts. He is buried in Ars-en-Ré.

Influence and Recognition

Claude Barma is widely regarded as a pioneer of French television and one of the principal architects of its formative programming. He played a foundational role in developing live drama broadcasts and series formats specifically suited to the medium, helping establish television as a distinct artistic and narrative platform in France. His work also advanced the adaptation of literary classics for television audiences, contributing to the medium's capacity to engage with cultural heritage through serialized and dramatized forms. In 1957, Barma received the Grand Prix de la télévision française, a major early honor that recognized his innovative contributions during the initial expansion of television in the country. His pioneering techniques and formats exerted lasting influence on subsequent French public television, shaping approaches to dramatic storytelling, serial production, and audience engagement in the decades that followed.

References

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