|
(Photo caption 1)
With his wife, Romanian journalist Maria Stella
Signorini, during their American stay, between 1955 and 1957
(Photo caption 2)
Relaxing on the shore of the Adriatic, with Italian
comedienne Luciana Vedovelli, in 1952

A Lithuanian-born Frenchman who has chosen Italy as his
cinematic home, Jacques Sernas has so well adapted himself to his Roman
environment that when George Marchal arrived there in the 50s, Italians started
calling him "the French Jacques Sernas". A cosmopolitan comedian, in the sense
that beauty knows no frontiers, he was born to be on a film plateau and to
entertain crowds. After the war, his Germanic charm, tinged with Slavic
highlights, and his athletic build easily overwhelmed his scholastic
aspirations. Before even knowing what was happening, he was dressed in a peplum,
thrown in the arms of Anna Maria Ferrero and Carla Del Poggio and loaned to the
Saint Maurice studios of Warner Brothers. Faithful to his adoptive country,
however, he came back to live "the remainder of his age", as the poet would say.
He is so perfectly assimilated to the artistic life of the peninsula, where he
still does stage and TV work, that his name, in other countries, only survives
in people’s memories.
Jacques Sernas was born on July 30, 1925, in Kaunas
(Lithuania) to a Baltic father and a Russian mother. He left the shores of the
Baltic sea at age one, for France, where his mother, after the death of her
husband, who was his country’s minister of Justice, remarried a Parisian doctor.
This is how Jacques Sernas became a French citizen and adapted so well to his
new milieu that his Italian assimilation, twenty years later, caused no problem.
This easy-going nature has always been an advantage since, already at age 15, he
could master several languages, including Russian, German, English and,
eventually, Italian.
He is still 15 when the war starts. He abandons high
school and enters the Resistance movement as a courier but is arrested by the
occupant and imprisoned in the camp of Büchenwald, where he wastes away until
the German defeat. Back in civilian life, he prepares to study medicine at the
University of Paris, while insuring, through a variety of jobs, the survival of
his mother and his own. This is how he becomes a night watchman, a server at the
Café de la Paix, a ski instructor at Chamonix, and even a special correspondent
for the daily "Combat" at the Nuremberg trial. A sportsman and an athlete, he
also tries his hand at boxing. And it is in a training room that he will make
his first on-screen appearance, as an extra in "Miroir", starring Jean Gabin.
Finding this first experience underwhelming, he pursues
his medicine studies while accepting other small roles, because the work is easy
and pays well. Meanwhile, his photos make the rounds of talent agents and from
the studios of the French Lux company, where he appears in "La Révoltée"
("Stolen Affections"), they find their way to the Italian Lux company which is
casting its production of "Gioventù perduta" ("Lost Youth"). He makes a
favourable impression. So favourable, in fact, that he signs a contract in
letter form. Jacques Sernas arrives in Italy during the last months of 1947. He
will stay there permanently, with only a few occasional returns to France for a
film shoot.
1955 was a doubly important year for that young pin-up
boy. On June 4, he marries Romanian journalist Maria Stella Signorini, with whom
he will father a daughter, Francesca (1956) before resettling a few weeks later
in Hollywood after establishing contacts during the shooting of "Helen of Troy"
and "Jump Into Hell". But this American episode will be brief. It will represent
only two years of curiosity and a change of scenery for this citizen of the
world. In 1957, he comes back to Rome for good and reclaims his interrupted
Italian career.
His film career was naturally affected by the end of
the peplum period in the mid-60s. But this protean athlete did not wait to be in
his forties to diversify his activities and to express on stage what films only
offered very occasionally. Jacques Sernas did not renounce a film career,
however. It’s just that his films rarely cross the Alps. It is easier to run
into him nowadays in the gardens of the Villa Borghese or in a play by
Pirandello produced for a Roman theatre company.
|