[on Philippe Noiret] He was...I have a lot of emotion when I speak of Philippe, because he starred in my first film. He was a famous actor who said 'yes' to a young director with no real credits to his name. He even agreed to cut his salary in half. I asked him later, what made him stand by me in those days, and from then on. He said "I gave you my word," and that's the man he was. He was somebody...he had the politeness to make you feel everything was easy. He didn't have to do what so many of those American stars do: thirty minutes of silence between takes. Philippe was making jokes, telling stories, then you said 'action,' and he was great. He wanted to make you believe that he knew nothing, that he was good by accident. Of course, this wasn't true. When he was very, very sick, he was doing a play, Love Letters. He could barely walk, but when he came out to take his bow, he was running out on to the stage. One of his co-stars said to him "Philippe, I thought you were so sick, but I can't keep up with you when you run out on stage. What happened?" He said "Simple: here, darling, I am acting." Then he spent his last days, on his deathbed, teaching another actor to take over his role when he was gone. That was Philippe. I absolutely adored him.
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