Boileau-Narcejac
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
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Boileau-Narcejac is the name by which Pierre Boileau (Paris, april 28 1906 - Beaulieu-sur-Mer, 1989) and Pierre Ayraud, aka Thomas Narcejac (Rochefort-sur-Mer, July 3 1908 - Nice, 1998) wrote. They were French writers of police stories, some of which became films by Henri-Georges Clouzot and Alfred Hitchcock.
Individually they were each winners of the prestigious Prix du Roman d'Aventures awarded each year to the best example of detective fiction, French or foreign: Boileau for Le Repos de Bacchus in 1938 and Narcejac for La Mort est du Voyage in 1948, each a locked-room mystery. They met on the occasion of the award dinner for Narcejac in 1948, to which Boileau - as a prior winner - had been invited. Their collaboration began shortly thereafter, with Boileau providing the plots and Narcejac the atmosphere and characterisations, not unlike Frederic Dannay and Manfred Lee (Ellery Queen).
Partial filmography
Bibliography
- Celle qui n'était plus (1952), adapted in 1955 by Clouzot, as Les Diaboliques
- D'entre les morts (1954), adapted in 1958 by Hitchcock, as Vertigo
- Les louves (1956)
- Les Magiciennes (1957)
- L'Ingenieur Aimait Trop les Chiffres (1958)
- ... Et mon tout est un homme (1965)
- Carte vermeil (1978)
- Les intouchables (1980)
- Le soleil dans la main (1990)
- La main passe (1991)
- Les nocturnes (1992)
The last three books were the work of Narcejac working alone.