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French filmmaker and playwright Xavier durringer dies at 61
French screenwriter, director and playwright Xavier Durringer has died suddenly at the age of 61 following a heart attack, his agent Céline Kamina announced on Sunday. The artist passed away at his home in L’Isle-sur-la-Sorgue, near Avignon.
“Nothing could have foreshadowed this devastating news,” Kamina said, describing Durringer as “a remarkable author, always searching, always pushing the boundaries of his art.”
Born in December 1963, Durringer began his career studying drama at 18. In the 1980s, he wrote and staged his first plays — raw and rebellious works that, in his words, “shook the institution.” By the mid-1990s, he had turned his attention to film, directing his debut feature, La Nage indienne (1992), which gave actress Karine Viard her first major role and earned her a César nomination.
Over his career, Durringer directed eight films, including La Conquête (2011), a political drama tracing Nicolas Sarkozy’s rise to power between 2003 and 2007. The film, starring Denis Podalydès, premiered out of competition at the Cannes Film Festival and sparked significant media interest.
In 2017, he directed Ne m’abandonne pas, a powerful television film on youth radicalization, which later won an International Emmy Award and was screened in French schools as part of an educational program.
Beyond film and theater, Durringer also wrote the novel Sfumato (2015), exploring the world of rock, nightlife and love in the 1980s — echoing the energy of his early artistic years.
For Durringer, writing was more than a profession; it was a lifeline. “Writing gave me a ticket to existence,” he once said during a 2019 masterclass at the Société des Auteurs.