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Marcel Courmes

Marcel Courmes
Marcel Courmes aviator in 1916
Born(1885-06-13)13 June 1885
Marseille
Died5 May 1950(1950-05-05) (aged 64)[1]
Neuilly-sur-Seine, France
Buried
Allegiance French Republic
Service/branchFrench Army Light Aviation
RankSquadron Leader
AwardsKnight of the Legion of Honour on 6 July 1929
Alma materÉcole spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr, École de cavalerie, Saumur
RelationsCourmes family
Other workSound cinematographers

Marcel Louis Henry Joseph Léon Courmes (13 June 1885 – 5 May 1950) was a French officer and aviator during the First World War. He subsequently became one of the first French sound cinematographers.

Biography

Family and Background

Courmes was born on June 13, 1885, the son of Euphémie Segond[2] and Captain Arthur Louis Courmes (1849-1921), Knight of the Legion of Honour.[3] His lineage can be traced agnatically to the Huguenot captain Luc Courmes (1580, Grasse).[4][5][6]

He was also the great-grandnephew of Claude-Marie Courmes, deputy of Var, mayor of Grasse, and Knight of the Legion of Honour.[citation needed]

On March 21, 1910 Courmes married Louise Read Chadwick, daughter of the American painter Francis Brooks Chadwick and the Swedish painter Emma Löwstädt-Chadwick, in Grez-sur-Loing.[7]

Courmes had a son, Lieutenant Christian Courmes (1913–1987), and a daughter, Gilberte Courmes.[8] Christian was a prisoner in 1942 at the Colditz fortress. He participated in the escape attempt known as "The Metro" and "The French Tunnel".[9] Gilberte married Colonel Maurice Delage,[10], who joined General Leclerc's "Force L" and created the 13th Engineering Battalion of the 2nd Armored Division, eventually taking part in Operation Overlord and the Liberation of Paris.[11]

Military Career

École de cavalerie de Saumur, France (1907-1909)

Courmes graduated 6th out of 277 from his class at the École spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr, and Major out of 60 at École de cavalerie, Saumur.[12]

Captain Marcel Courmes, pilot of the French 2nd Bombardment, Group GB 2, August 1915

He was a classmate of Colonel de La Rocque and demonstrated his military loyalty to him by testifying as a character witness at La Rocque's trial.[13] He was also close to the first Chinese Saint-Cyrien, General Prince Pao-Tchao Dan (1884-1958).[14]

Courmes Coat of Arms[15]

He served as second lieutenant in the 5th African Hunter Regiment (1907), then as lieutenant in the 2nd African Hunter Regiment (1907–1908). He served during the Moroccan Campaign in the 28th Dragoon Regiment (1910–1911) and in the 7th Dragoon Regiment (1913). He was described as a "brilliant but dreamy, excessively artistic cavalry officer who has a tendency towards too much benevolence in his command, which can have serious disadvantages in times of war."[12][by whom?]

In 1914, he was a special staff officer in the 4th Dragoon Regiment. He joined the French Air Force on August 1, 1915 in the French 2nd Bombardment Group, and then served in the Escadrille F 63. He was described as "an officer of perfect education, of an independent character who has great qualities of composure, courage and willpower, which make him an excellent pilot."[12][by whom?]

Career in film

Marcel Courmes, actor and artistic director for La chienne, Jean Renoir 1931

Courmes was one of the first French sound cinematographers, along with Joseph de Bretagne, both of whom participated in many French films of the 1930s.[clarification needed] In 1931, the pair featured in film La Chienne directed by Jean Renoir, for which Courmes was the artistic director and played the role of "The Colonel". They were supported by technical advisors from Western Electric, Bell and Hotchckiss whom assisted in direct capture of outdoor sound.[16] The pair's contribution is most apparent in the film's final sequence, a tracking shot with dialogue between Michel Simon and Alexis Godart on a busy street.[according to whom?] The "sound trucks" necessary for this sequence were used by the novice technicians, with the help of experts from Western Electric.[16]

Courmes' is also credited in Braunberger and Richebé films such as Fantômas (with Bell in 1932) and The Agony of the Eagles (1933, with Bell). Courmes also recorded the street sounds of La Tête d'un homme for Julien Duvivier (1932, production Vandal et Delac) and those of Hôtel du Nord for Marcel Carné in 1938. He worked again with Bretagne for the Renoir film Madame Bovary (1933) and Le Voyage de M. Perrichon (1934).[16]

Awards and Honors

Courmes obtained the following distinctions:[17]

  • Knight of the Legion of Honor (July 6, 1929)
  • Croix de Guerre (1914-1918), with Palm
  • Morocco commemorative medal (1909), Morocco Clasp, Algerian-Moroccan Borders (at war)
  • Citation to the Order of the Army, number 32489 (July 13, 1916) with mention: "Bold and skillful pilot carried out 10 bombings, including 9 at night; this is particularly distinguished by carrying out successfully on the night of the 17th on May 18, 1916 a particularly perilous expedition to an important station."[citation needed]

Filmography

Marcel Courmes was one of the first French sound cinematographers and was also the artistic director of Jean Renoir's film La Chienne. He participated in the following films[18]

References

  1. ^ "1E_NUM_NEU_D1950 - 1950 - 01/01/1950 - 29/12/1950 Démo" (in French). Archives départementales des Hauts-de-Seine. Retrieved 10 December 2023.
  2. ^ Extract from the Civil Status Registers of Marseille deposited at the registry of the Court of First Instance of the said city, 1889, volume 6, number 19.
  3. ^ Service record of Captain Arthur Courmes : SHD - GR 5YE 86783
  4. ^ Myriam A. Orban, Diplômée de la faculté de théologie protestante de Paris et de Montpellier : Grasse, ses seigneurs et la religion prétendue réformée au XVIe siècle. Recherches régionales. Alpes-Maritimes et contrées limitrophes. 2020, page 21. |url=https://www.departement06.fr/documents/A-votre-service/Culture/archives/recherches-regionales/recherches_regionales_217_1.pdf
  5. ^ Christelle Accary and 16 other authors, "Entre terre, mer et ciel. Les cimetières des Alpes-Maritim (XIIe - XXIe siècles" editing Département des Alpes-Maritime snook. 2020, page 28.
  6. ^ Christian Gabert "Histoire des familles" available at the Historical Library of Grasse
  7. ^ Frederick Delius (1983). Delius, a Life in Letters: 1862-1908. Harvard University Press. p. xx} – via Google.
  8. ^ État de services du lieutenant Christian Courmes : SHD - GR 2000-2-202-02818
  9. ^ Leonce Petitcolin (1985). Les fortes têtes, 1940-1944, La forteresse de Colditz (in French). France-Empire. p. 20-.
  10. ^ Civil status, extract from the register of birth certificates for the year 1906. "Maurice Delage married in second marriage Douala, Cameroon, on August 7, 1946, to Gilberte Louise Courmes."
  11. ^ "Biographie - Ordre National de la Libération" (in French).
    - Jean-Christophe Notin (2000). 1061 compagnons : Histoire des Compagnons de la Libération (in French). Perrin. ISBN 2-262-01606-2.
    - Vladimir Trouplin (2010). Dictionnaire des Compagnons de la Libération (in French). Elytis. ISBN 978-2-356-39033-2.
  12. ^ a b c État de services du chef d'escadrons Marcel Courmes : SHD - GR 8YE 3139.
  13. ^ Colonel de La Rocque (2014). Pourquoi je suis républicain (in French). Seuil. pp. 141 and 215.
  14. ^ Général Jean Boÿ. "Historique de la 90e promotion (1905-07)" (PDF) (in French).
  15. ^ Charles d'Hozier. Armorial général de France (in French). Vol. 29. Provence, Grasse – via Gallica.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  16. ^ a b c Martin Barnier (2011). "Les premiers ingénieurs du son français : The first French sound engineers". 1895 (65). l'Association française de recherche sur l'histoire du cinéma: 200–217. doi:10.4000/1895.4445.
  17. ^ Extracts from the service records of Squadron Leader Marcel Courmes : SHD - GR 8YE 3139. : Citation to the Order of the Army num. 3428D of 13 July 1916 and list of decorations.
  18. ^ Ciné-ressources.net search : Marcel Courmes.

Bibliography

  • René Martel (1939). L'aviation française de bombardement, des origines au 11 novembre 1918 (in French). Paul Hartmann.
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