Belatedly getting to know Emmanuelle Riva: will she win the Best Actress Oscar?

Yesterday, CB, Bedhead and I were working out what we were going to cover on Oscar night and I volunteered to do the coverage of the Best Actresses. Then a thought struck me: what if the French actress Emmanuelle Riva actually won?! And what if she won and that night was literally the first time I had discussed her in any way? So this is my belated post about poor Emmanuelle Riva. I’m sorry I didn’t talk about her sooner. Sunday is her 86th birthday, which makes her the oldest Best Actress nominee ever, and if she wins, she’ll be the oldest actor to ever take home an acting award.

Riva is nominated for her performance in Amour. She plays “retired music teacher Anne, a spirited woman who suffers from a stroke that ultimately leaves her helpless and in the care of longtime husband Georges (played by Jean-Louis Trintignant).” As I looked through the photos we have of Riva, I realized that she’s barely been anywhere during the awards season – she hasn’t come to any of the awards shows, and she only made it to New York once for the National Board of Review Awards. So it’s not like I was actively trying to ignore her! She just wasn’t around. Anyway, Us Weekly has a nice piece of “five things you didn’t know about…”

1. Best birthday ever! The Oscars, held this year on Sunday, Feb. 24, also marks Riva’s 86th birthday. In other words, if she snags the award ahead of her much-younger counterparts, then she will have set an even higher threshold of cinematic greatness as the oldest person to ever win an Oscar, beating out Christopher Plummer, who was 82 when he won Best Supporting Actor for his role in 2010’s Beginners.

2. Simple beginnings: Riva’s first job was working as a seamstress in Remiremont, a rural part of the eastern French countryside, a far cry from the glitz and glamour of Hollywood. She did a few “little theater productions” during grade school, she told The Hollywood Reporter, but it wasn’t until she came across an ad for a theater school in Paris several years after high school graduation that she dared to take a stab at acting professionally.

3. A woman of many talents: In addition to being a revered actress in her native France, having tackled such notable French films as Gillo Pontecorvo’s Kapo (1960), Jean-Pierre Melville’s Leon Morin (1961) and Georges Franju’s Therese (1962), Riva is also a published photographer. The actress’ landmark first film, 1959’s Hiroshima Mon Amour, was set in the famous Japanese city, and Riva took photos of Hiroshima that later went on to be part of a Japanese exhibit at the Nikon Salon (the images were also published in book form in France and Japan).

4. Parlez-vous anglais? Riva hasn’t been campaigning for her Oscar the way her other competitors (Jessica Chastain, Jennifer Lawrence, Naomi Watts and Quvenzhane Wallis) may have been because the actress admittedly doesn’t speak any English. “I’m sure you know that roles for older women in cinema are not that numerous,” she told THR. “And when you’re 84 years old? It’s not very often that you find a role that matches you.”

5. No retirement on the horizon: Despite her more advanced age, Riva isn’t planning on quitting the industry anytime soon. The actress will next appear in French comedy A Greek Type of Problem, in the self-explanatory role of “Granny.”

[From Us Weekly]

Some Oscar-watchers think Riva has had a late surge in votes because she’s so old and this will likely be her last and only time at the show. Going along with that, the Oscars have a history of giving awards at the end of an actor’s career, symbolically giving the award as some kind of “lifetime achievement.” I don’t know though… it’s not like Riva was or is widely known in America, nor is Amour some unexpected hit (like The Artist last year), and I still think Jessica Chastain or Jennifer Lawrence will have a better shot at it. My money is still on Chastain, actually. Weird, I know.

Photos courtesy of WENN.

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64 Responses to “Belatedly getting to know Emmanuelle Riva: will she win the Best Actress Oscar?”

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  1. mel says:

    HOPEFULLY!!!

    Please pray to God that they give it to her. Her early work as an actress was fantastic and Hiroshima Mon Amour is a French classic. Besides, she was so heartbreaking in Amour, a performance that truly stays with you for a long time.

    • Amanda says:

      Hopefully she will win, not that she needs that, but she deserves.

    • Miss Jupitero says:

      Writing from Paris here! It is evening and we are back from feasting on crepes after an afternoon in the Louvre, so I am feeling more biased than ever toward Riva.

      I adore her, and I dearly hope she wins this. It would feel like a lifetime achievment award, well seserved i think. I was jubilant when bagged the BAFTA.

      Excuse typos please– I Uzi g my phone to post this….

    • Trashaddict says:

      Damn, I hope I look that good at 86! PLEASE let her win. Then the younger ones would realize they have to get seasoned a bit and actually do some work to win the Oscar. And yes, I am over 50.

  2. Lisa says:

    I am on “team old people”. I hope she wins and really hope Alan Arkin wins for Argo (supporting actor). He was awesome and he’s 78.

  3. Cherry says:

    I would love it if she’d win. Amour is an incredibly impressive movie, but as I understand it, a bit controversial for the US (talking of euthenasia). Actually, I was surprised her costar, Jean-Louis Trintignant, wasn’t nominated for best actor. That would have been interesting. He’s one of France’s finest actors and has been working steadily for over 50 years. He’s also well known for his torrid affair with Brigitte Bardot in the late 1950s. Ah, those were the days…

  4. Redheadwriter says:

    I can only hope I look that good at her age! Nice to see someone not all botoxed and lip plumped up.

    • BW says:

      Agreed! Isn’t she beautiful!

      • spinner says:

        She is indeed beautiful. Look at that bone structure. I love her & hope she wins. She reminds me of my Mother.

      • Miss Jupitero says:

        Writing from Paris here! It is evening and we are back from feasting on crepes after an afternoon in the Louvre, so I am feeling more biased than ever toward Riva.

        I adore her, and I dearly hope she wins this. It would feel like a lifetime achievment award, well seserved i think. I was jubilant when bagged the BAFTA.

        Excuse typos please– I am using my phone to post this….

      • Miss Jupitero says:

        Sorry for that double post… Not sure what my phone just did. Argh…..

  5. Jane says:

    I want her to win, not just because she gave the best performance, but it would be a lesson to those who campaigned until they were nearly dead and still lost. I hate, hate, hate campaigns.

    Funny how much money Harvey W put into Lawrence’s campaign, but did nothing for Cooper or the other actors. I guess when you are up against DDL, you just give it to him since everyone knows he is best and if DDL did campaign, it was so subtle, you didn’t notice.

    • Shira says:

      What are you talking about, you could see everybody from SLP around award season because it’s nominated in so many categories. And yes, Jennifer if the best shot at a “big” reward for them, so obviously she’s around more. But Bradley’s also been showing his face quite a lot despite probably knowing 2 months ago there’s just no chance in hell.

  6. Scarlet Vixen says:

    She’s adorable!! And I LOVE the teal & floral coat she’s wearing in the last couple pics-gorgeous color and age appropriate without screaming ‘Granny.’

    I think she may get the Oscar–the Academy loves a good story, and loves to reward older actors. Best Supporting Actress is the award that usually favors the young and upcoming actresses. The only big title I’ve seen is Lincoln (I have a newborn and 2 other young’uns–I don’t get out much!) so Best Actress is the category I’ve been struggling most with on my Oscar party ballot.

  7. tabby says:

    Man I hope she wins the Oscar. It would be refreshing to see someone else win, rather than a big Hollywood star.

  8. derpy says:

    I want Naomi Watts to win, even though I know she won’t. She’s just so underrated.

    P.S. http://blindgossip.com/?p=50834

    I read this last night. It’s about an anon directors Oscar votes. He actually watched most of the nominees and thought out each choice. I liked what whoever he was had to say about all the noms. Plus some of the stuff he said was really funny.

    • GoodCapon says:

      Hmmm who do you think it could be?

    • Bijlee says:

      Wow. I’m so surprised by this. What people say about the Oscar voting system is true. It sounds like a load of crap. He’s prolly some rando director and he’s not hat knowledgable about all the films. Q. Wallis was five when she gave that performance does that change anything?

    • L says:

      I want Naomi Watts to win to. Her performance was awesome.

  9. Miss M says:

    I hope so!!!!

    She gave an unbelievable and powerful performance!

  10. Mia 4S says:

    She is so pretty! God I hope I look that good at even 60! She’s got a good shot I imagine, especially since Jennifer and Jessica will be back…multiple times most likely. Still I remember when Gloria Stuart was nominated for Titanic (at about 86 years old I think) and lost to Kim Basinger. I would not bet my money in this race!

    • lady mary. says:

      exactly ,i hope i look half this good when iam 60 ,and not botoxed ,bloated ,and i believe an actor is an actor irrespective of his /her age and should be given fair consideration ,i pray pray she should win ,i saw amour ,its been a long while since any movie has touched my soul as “amour”

    • LAK says:

      Jessica Tandy is still the oldest Best Actress winner. She was 80yrs when she won for DRIVING MISS DAISY.

      it wasn’t a pity win.

  11. Shira says:

    It’ll actually be her 86th birthday.

  12. ds says:

    She was my first pick, and Naomi Watts second. I hope one of them gets it ’cause they did a really good job. I like Jennifer Lawrence: she was brilliant in Winters bone but this time; it’s just not Oscar worthy. Honestly.

  13. lamamu says:

    Her’s is definitely the most powerful and devastating of the field. Hope she wins!

    Side note: did anyone else think they should’ve cast an older actress for Silver Linings? Lawrence was good, but I would have felt more invested in her character of she’d been a 30-something-year-old widow, instead of a girl in her early 20’s. I would have felt there was more to the marriage she lost…

    • Bijlee says:

      I haven’t seen the movie, but I just feel like they should have cast someone older, more mature. I guess heartbreak is heartbreak at any age, but I would prefer female roles be played at the appropriate age. I like her, but everything about her is hype.

    • Oops says:

      I agree, there’s something wrong with jennifer Lawrence in this role, I think she was bad, I don’t like her interpretatio, I don’t understand why studios, producers, choose actresses so yooung for roles like this one, it’s stupid and makes the wole thing unbelievable.
      And because I’m french and because Emmanuelle Riva is a wonderful actress I want she wins, I wouldn’t understand if she loses while Marion Cotillard and Jean Dujardin won

    • Mrs. Ari Gold says:

      @Lamamu
      I couldn’t agree with you more. I loved Silver Linings but it was clear that the role waa meant for someone about 10-15 years older. For as good as it is it could have been even better – it would have given their romance, thus the while film, so much more heart.
      Too bad!

  14. Hubbahun says:

    It doesn’t matter who wins this award because Sunday will be all about ANNE WITH AN E!!!!!!!!!!! doncha know that Best Supporting Actress is really the award everyone wants to win and it’s ANNE’s alllllllllll ANNE’S……………….

    • mystified says:

      I agree. What a bunch of meanies trying to take away from Anne’s big day. Everyone knows Anne should be the center of attention. I think Anne should be allowed to tell the nominees what to wear — sort of like bridesmaids.

      No one should try to steal attention from Anne; that’s just rude!

  15. lena80 says:

    picture of the oldest and youngest best actress nominees

    http://www.vulture.com/2013/01/emmanuelle-riva-and-quvenzhan-wallis-together.html

    I would love either of these two to win the award. It would be a good lesson to the other nominees who think they have it in the bag, and I’m tired of the same white bread actresses winning every year. Chastain was good in ZDT, but I didn’t think anything special about her performance. I can’t comment on Lawrence or Watts performances. Riva was fantastic in Amour and Quvenzhane was fantastic in Beasts both performances stuck with me DAYS after.

  16. lily says:

    God I really hope she wins. Her performance in Amour is beyond amazing!!!

  17. CC says:

    haven’t seens the movie (but people say it’s good, taking their word for it) but it would be sweet.

    • T.C. says:

      Haven’t seen her movie either I don’t live in a major coastal city. She is adorable though. Nice to know she has another film after the Oscars. A comedy this time.

  18. Suze says:

    She looks really really good. Not “for her age” good but just good.

    I haven’t seen the movie because the subject matter is just too dark for my current mood, but I hear great things about her performance. Now I am cheering her on for the win!

  19. kingkayski says:

    If the academy wants to get their integrity back and not to be known as campaign award,they better give it to somebody deserving this time,and Ms Riva is the most deserving one to win this year.

    • videli says:

      Best point here. I thought that the Oscars will be less of a pageant after the Hurt Locker got the best picture instead of the 3D Smurfs. We’ll see.

  20. Ms Kay says:

    I am deeply rooting for her!!!!

  21. Flo says:

    I don’t think she’ll win and I also don’t think she should win. Don’t get me wrong, she was amazing in Amour and being French, I know Emanuelle Riva is a very respected actress in her home country.
    The thing is, and it may be hard for some Americans to wrap their minds around it, not everybody desperetely wants an Oscar. I mean, I’m sure she must be pleased. Of course. Because it’s always nice to see your talent being recognized but at the same time, does she need an Oscar? She’s French, her whole career was in French cinema and she’s 86 years old.
    I’d rather they give the Oscar to someone who will actually use that Oscar to get more challenging roles or even better roles.
    Oscars are about talent but they’re also about new career opportunities.

    • Ms Kay says:

      Um.. Being an actor is about getting any opportunity for a good role before anything else, Oscars and other awards may or may not reward the good role but still it stays a good performance by the actor.

      Christopher Plummer was 84 when he got his Oscar, what’s your angle here? You are speaking as if because she is old she can’t act anymore nor take any challenging role later, and plus portraying a woman with Alzheimer isn’t challenging perhaps or am I confused here?

      And it has nothing to do with being French, plenty of actors/actresses got nominated out of the blue, remember the actress from Maria Full of Grace? And the other actresses from Babel, the Japanese and Mexican ones? And that actor last year at the Oscars, I think he was South American? They may have not won but they got nominated. I could go on and on about the list…

      Oscars don’t make a career, you are quite wrong if you think that way, it doesn’t make any career opportunity per se, in fact with or without an Oscar nod, a career may tank just like it can go very well, so your reasoning of thinking that with an Oscar a career goes up the hills, well it ain’t so. Oscars are a joke and they sometimes get it right by recognising talent, but mostly about campaign like politics.

      So if they nominated Emmanuelle Riva, it is for her talent, they could have just ignored her and put another actress instead. And Emmanuelle doesn’t look like she was expecting to be nominated, so she isn’t exactly desperate?

      If she wins, it’s well deserved.

    • kingkayski says:

      I don’t know what’s you’re point Flo but Oscar as cheap as it is now,is supposed to be the top drawer of all the awards show,it shouldn’t discriminate on actors age,race or ethnicity.It should be the most talented ones amongst the talents.They have hits and missed these past few years,but i hope this year they make it a hit by choosing Ms. Riva ,her performance in Amour is beyond amazing.

    • mel says:

      I’m sorry but are you high or what? Are you implying that an award that is meant to recognise talent and celebrate good performances should honour a person that does not deserve it just because she/he could use it differently?

      Are you aware that the worst Oscar winners are the ones that won even though they were not the best that year? Like Sandra Bullock or Natalie Portman and people recognise that.

      Girl, you must be an Academy member

    • lily says:

      I don’t understand your point. So she shouldn’t win just because she’old and she is French? Oscar and every movie awards is supposed to reward the best performance of the year.

  22. lolwut says:

    I predict she’ll win. I finally saw Amour yesterday and this woman… I’m telling you, she is PHENOMENAL. Think an older, French Meryl Streep. She was so ridiculously talented that all the other talented nominees honestly don’t hold a candle to her. So when she wins, it’s not a pity thing. It’s not because she’s old and its her last chance. It’s because she’s the best. And her co-star, Jean-Louis Trintignant, was immaculate in that movie, too. I can’t even think about the fact that, though the group of best actors nominees this year is unprecedentedly strong, he’s not included. See Amour, if you haven’t!

  23. Ann says:

    I hope she wins. And WOW does she look fabulous, or what??!!

  24. kc says:

    She is gorgeous. Hope I look like that at 86!

  25. yas says:

    Absolutely adored her in AMOUR. She was unbelievable. And the fact that she is in her 80’s and could still do roles that are so physically demanding is really quite astonishing.

    Will be rooting for her on Sunday night.

  26. Allie says:

    Amour was the best film of 2012. I’d be estatic if she wins.

  27. nina says:

    Amour was amazing. I hope she wins !

  28. LAK says:

    This film has haunted me since i saw it in Cannes last year.

    Emmanualle Riva is the best actress in the race by miles.

    I am so happy she got the Bafta and i hope she gets the oscar. And not because she’s old let’s throw her a bone coz she may be dead next year. She is hands down the BEST actress of the nominated lot.

    It’s a pity co-star Jean-Louis Trintignant wasn’t nominated but i won’t be unhappy with a DDL/Joaquin Pheonix win.

    AMOUR has been nominated in other categories and i hope it wins them all bar foreign film which i hope goes to KON TIKI.

    If Riva doesn’t get it, it would be fabulous if hushpuppy did.

    The other 3 ladies were good but not against Riva or Hushpuppy.

  29. Seagulls says:

    That woman is exquisitely beautiful.

  30. Frances says:

    I hope so, but I don’t think it will happen because studios can’t make money with her…

  31. Ms Kay says:

    Update: Emmanuelle Riva just won the Cesar (French Oscar) for Best Actress, she got a standing ovation! Now onto the Oscar 🙂

    • LAK says:

      That is fantastic.

      Are you headed to LA, if you aren’t already, to cover the Oscars?

      • Ms Kay says:

        Hello LAK

        Unfortunately I am not, but I am having fun here in Scotland, covering the Glasgow Film Festival last days, press screening tomorrow 🙂

    • Miss M says:

      @Ms Ka-Doo: This is wonderful news!!! Thanks for one more update!

  32. JanMa says:

    Emmanuelle Riva is inspirational and should win the Oscar. On a sad side-note, Jean-Louis Trintignant’s daughter (Marie) was killed in 2003 by her then boyfriend who flew into a jealous rage about text messages she received from her ex husband. He got 8 years and was out in 3 or 4. A very sad reminder of what might have happened in the OP case (although the evidence remains to come out) and what happens to too many women around the world at the hands of their partners. It is shocking that it is so easy for the boyfriends/husbands to claim that it was not their “intention” to kill and therefore get away with no or little punishment. Unfortunately with many of these crimes there are no witnesses so the only account comes from the accused and forensic evidence can often be challenged because of investigative error. Very sad reminders of that in the news all the time.

  33. Mira says:

    Christopher Plummer deserved every bit of the accolades he won for Beginners. So did Ewan but he went unrecognized. The movie is a gem. I cry a river if a parent or a dog dies in a movie.

    Riva and Jean-Louis Trintignant have given inspirational performances in a very sensitive film. The Best Actor (Female) category is always so damp each year with performances like JLaw in SLP and Chastain in ZDT getting nominated (and winning eventually). These are good performances but they don’t live long in memory. It says a lot about how roles are written for women and men in movies. Sandra Bullock, Reese Witherspoon, Goopy, Julia Roberts, Portman, all of them are such terrible wins.

  34. aquarius74 says:

    Emmanuelle Riva is such a beautiful human being, she deserves any bit of award you can think of.

    She’s such a model. I mean, who doesn’t want to be like her, beautiful at 85, free spirit, not a slave to business ? She’s one of a lighthouse in our grey lives.

  35. said says:

    she didn’t win. I’m disgusted.