A touching tribute to an overlooked French actor.
Maria Schneider (1952-2011) was far more than the actor known for her explicit sex scenes with Marlon Brando in the controversial Last Tango in Paris, though few were interested in anything else. Her younger cousin, Vanessa, will change that with this powerful remembrance of their time together. Vanessa, a novelist, reporter, and commentator on French politics, writes this memoir like a love letter, addressing her famous cousin as “You,” recalling the stories about Maria that she witnessed or were told to her. Their stories were intertwined even before Vanessa was born, since it was her birth that forced Maria, then 16, to stop staying with Vanessa’s parents after her mother forced her to move out of their house. Though Vanessa initially worshipped her famous cousin and the often glamorous life she led at an early age, thanks to her father, French actor Daniel Gélin, she began to see how fame hurt Maria, especially after the release of Last Tango in Paris, for which she felt victimized by the film’s director, Bernardo Bertolucci. Vanessa chronicles this fascinating story in often affectionate yet unflinching language, a quality that carries through in Ringwald’s spare, poignant translation from French. “I often worry that you won’t approve of the story I’m telling, Maria,” Vanessa writes. “You won’t like that I’m speaking of the drugs, of your mother and father and brothers. So, I erase what I just wrote, and then I write it again, because talking about you without talking about the drugs, your mother, your father, or Tango would mean giving up talking about you at all.” Maria Schneider, with all her adventures and struggles, deserves to be better remembered, and her cousin shows us why.
This stunning tale of Maria Schneider and her battles is stark yet consistently loving—and unforgettable.