Agnes Varda, grande dame of French cinema, dies aged 90

Agnes Varda on the Red Carpet for the screening of BlaKkKlansman at the 71st Cannes Film festival in May last year
Agnes Varda on the Red Carpet for the screening of BlaKkKlansman at the 71st Cannes Film festival in May last year

PARIS (Reuters) – Agnes Varda, the Belgian-born grande dame of French cinema and an influential force behind the New Wave movement, died at her home in Paris on Friday. She was 90 years old.

A close contemporary of cinema legends such as Francois Truffaut and Jean-Luc Godard, Varda won an honorary Oscar in 2017 and the Berlin Film Festival’s Berlinale Camera lifetime achievement award only last month.

She made her most recent film, “Agnes by Varda”, which shows her discussing her work before live audiences and extracts from earlier films spliced in, to help bid farewell to her audience.

“I have to prepare myself to say goodbye and go away,” Varda told a news conference in Berlin in February.

Varda began her career as a stills photographer before becoming one of the leading voices and maverick of the Left Bank Cinema and French New Wave.

Her films focused on the issues faced by ordinary people, such as harvesters (“The Gleaners and I,” 2000), drifters (“Vagabond,” 1985) and on women in particular (“Cleo from 5 to 7,” 1962).

A rare female voice in the New Wave movement, Varda’s works are often considered feminist because of her use of female protagonists.

“Women have to make jokes about themselves, laugh about themselves, because they have nothing to lose,” she once said.

Varda was making movies until the end. At the age of 89, she partnered with the French photographer and muralist known as JR on “Faces Places,” a film that featured the two meandering through rural France, encountering the locals and forming their own friendship.

“Shaken, overwhelmed, bereaved: these feelings that come with the certainty that we have just lost one of the greatest artists of our time,” tweeted French Culture Minister Franck Riester.