Tuesday, 5 May 2026

Alternate Best Actor 1953: Charles Boyer in The Earrings of Madame de...

Charles Boyer did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying General André de... in The Earrings of Madame de….

The Earrings of Madame de… follows the possession of the titular earrings of a well to do wife of a General and how their ownership changes the dynamics of her and her husband’s life. 

It’s been quite some time since I’ve covered a Charles Boyer performance, and the only time I’ve covered a Charles Boyer performance where he was speaking in his native French. An actor I’ve always thought had presence but his standout role for me has always been Gaslight because his cold imperious demeanor seemed to fit the manipulative horrible husband of that character. Boyer once again plays a manipulative husband although the situation is quite a bit different here as we follow his relationship with the fairly shallow Madame de… first name Louise (Danielle Darrieux). The opening act follows Louise as she sells her earrings to support her lifestyle while putting on an elaborate act of “losing” them at the theater to convince her husband of such. Honestly throughout this sequence I found Boyer to be the most charming I’ve seen him in anything, not because he presents any sort of great loving husband or anything of that ilk, rather it is the way he presents the General as a man so very much in comfort both with himself and his wife’s approach to life as obviously imperfect as it is. Boyer’s quite a bit of fun as he goes along with the act with the sense that the General has some doubts to begin with and is just having fun playing along with it. One moment particularly worthy of note is a tradeoff with a servant of a man who accuses the General of having stared at his wife. Boyer’s playful delivery of deflecting while also completely admitting to the notion via a compliment of the beauty of the man’s wife before talking with pride of his own is just a wonderful bit of work, and genuinely charming in that very specific ownership of the situation. 

An approach by Boyer that only continues as he learns from their jeweler of his wife’s deceit. Boyer’s reaction though isn’t of any negativity whatsoever, in fact his reaction presents a certain enjoyment of the whole situation. I will admit particular affection for his reaction to his wife bemoaning the loss after he fully knows and Boyer’s exuding this particular joy of someone just loving the game more than anything. An aspect that only continues when the General chooses to give the earrings off to his own departing mistress as a gift. Boyer in that scene brings a playful energy as a man making the gift a bit of a trick of his own. The film then switches its focus more so on the romance between Louise and Baron Fabrizio Donati (Vittorio De Sica). Where the General is just occasionally checked into. Boyer supposedly had arguments with writer/director Max Ophüls over the motivation of the General, and understandably so as the character becomes a bit more enigmatic. Boyer apparently responded by choosing to play his scenes as omnipotent and taking that info manages to make some sense of the General’s switch from being amused by his wife’s actions to becoming a imperious judge against them. Boyer I think does maintain the thread though presenting the General essentially as this force for the social order and less so on a specific personal level. The scene of him pleading for her to maintain the arrangement is less of a desperate or even jealous husband, and more of an authoritarian ruler making quite clear the specific laws of his nation. An idea only extended upon later in the film where he challenges Donati to a duel. Again a scene where Boyer actually doesn’t play it all emotional, and I found his approach even slightly comical as the General speaks around the true infraction in a way. Boyer delivers the scene so rapidly and as a matter-of-fact, as again more so this is a requirement of the society that he make the duel challenge more than this is an emotional man trying to keep his wife. Boyer I think finds an internal logic within the film and his own performance. As much as I think Max Ophüls is the true star of the film, Boyer I think manages to stay present beyond the vision even when working in the vision by finding some genuine entertainment within presenting the General in consistently more satirical terms. 

4 comments:

Luke Higham said...

Louis: I know Cannes hasn't started yet but do you think its feasible for Pattinson to be a double nominee in Supporting Actor this year.

Ratings and thoughts on the cast.

Louis Morgan said...

Luke:

Darrieux - 3.5(Thinking about it maybe my certain reservation of the film has a little to do with her only that I didn’t feel her performance pulled me in the later scenes any more than the former. The former where I did think she effectively brought this slightly comedic blithe manner of just always being a little much. When the film seemed to shift I didn’t really care any more about her and her declarations of love felt just as thin to me as her lies about the earrings. Maybe again that was the intention but an aspect that didn’t entirely work for me then performance or film wise.)

De Sica - 3.5(He has a generally charming demeanor and brings kind of a general sunny energy. Again I didn't feel that much complication with the man however so I didn’t really care what happened to him, particularly as he just kind of smiled and an “oh yeah?” attitude in his main scene with Boyer. Which again I think worked well enough but certainly didn’t make me feel this was a deeply tragic situation either.)

Even if he’s the best performance in both films, I doubt it. One because Pattinson’s yet to break out with the academy, two while genre performances are more popular than ever with the academy there still is a certain hump, Odyssey and Dune III would both need to be top fivers and while I think both will receive many nominations, it’s very early in the game. I think more likely, because he’s having so many films come out, they would focus on one of his performances and just from this venture probably Dune III as the main villain. Or they focus on him as possibly Chris Hanson in Primetime if that turns out to be great.

Unknown said...

Louis: Can Pacino get a proper picture for The Godfather Part 2 review?? I think that photo doesn't load anymore.

Harris Marlowe said...

Louis: My request is Jesse Plemons in Game Night.