French postcard by Edition Pathé Frères.
French photo card by Pathé Frères for the film Bonaparte et Pichegru (Georges Denola, 1911), scripted by Georges Mitchell. Henri Étiévant as Leblanc, collecting his blood money from Bonaparte (Georges Saillard).
French postcard by ELD (E. Le Deley). Photo: Films Pathé Frères. Part of a booklet of postcards on Les Misérables (Albert Capellani, 1913). Caption: M. Madeleine (Henry Krauss) refuses the resignation of Javert (Henri Étiévant).
Inspector Javert
Henri Gaston Étiévan-Estival, better known as Henri Étiévant, was born in Paris in 1870. He was the son of journalist and playwright Alfred Etiévant, a Knight of the Legion of Honour.
Étiévant began as a stage actor in the 1890s. He acted at André Antoine's Théâtre-Libre (1893-1894) and the Théâtre de l'Œuvre (1895-1898).
From 1901, he acted for several years at the Théâtre de l'Ambigu-Comique, in plays such as 'Le Roman de Françoise' (1903), 'La Grande Famille' (1905), 'Roule-ta-Bosse' (1906) and 'Nick Carter' (1909). At least until 1912, Étiévant remained at the Ambigu.
Henri Étiévant made his film debut at Pathé Frères in 1908 and had a prolific career there until 1914. He often played bad guys, such as the traitor Leblanc in Bonaparte et Pichegru (Georges Denola, 1911), and as Jacques Garaud opposite the title character played by Jeanne Grumbach in La porteuse de pain (Georges Denola, 1912).
In the four-part episode film Les Misérables (Albert Capellani, 1913), he played Javert, the police commissioner mercilessly pursuing Jean Valjean (Henry Krauss). International critics, unaccustomed to such large-scale productions, were full of praise for Capellani's four-part production. Occasionally, Etiévant worked for other companies such as Radios, where he, e.g. played King Henry VIII in Le page / Pour être reine (1910) opposite Madeleine Céliat, who played Catherine Howard.
French postcard in the Collection Photo-Programme, Paris. The stage play 'La grande famille', by Alexandre Arquillière, was first performed at the Paris-based Théâtre de l'Ambigu on 22 November 1905. Play in six acts, directed by Georges Grisier. Main actors: Louis Gauthier (Sergeant Bertrand), Henri Etiévant (Lieutenant Brune - on the photo), Suzanne Munte (Louise), Villa (the corporal). Caption: Act 4. At Louise's room - Abandonment of his post at the guard's.
French postcard. Scene from the stage play 'Roule ta Bosse' by Jules Mary & Émile Rochard. The play was first staged at the Théâtre de l'Ambigu in Paris in 1906. The leads were for Henri Étiévant as Bastien Clairejoie, named Roule-ta-Bossse, Maggie Gauthier as Bastienne, and Grey as Gaspard de Mauléon. Caption: Gargousse [to Grey] There is only you as a man of the world carrying a revolver. Grey is the man with the straw hat, who plays the evil count. Right in the light clothes stands Roule-ta-Bosse, played by Henri Étiévant.
French photo card by Pathé Frères for the film Bonaparte et Pichegru (Georges Denola, 1911), scripted by Georges Mitchell. Left, Louis Ravet as Pichegru, in the middle Henri Étiévant as Leblanc.
Spanish collectors card by Chocolate Amatller, Barcelona, no. 3 of 6. Photo: Milano Films. Mercedes Brignone, Franz Sala and Livio Pavanelli in Il rubino del destino / The Ruby of Destiny (Henri Étiévant, 1914), scripted by Augusto Genina. The film was released in Spain as El rubí del destino in January 1914.
Film director in Italy, Germany and France
In 1913, Henri Étiévant worked as a film director at Milano Films, on films with Pina Fabbri, Livio Pavanelli, and Thea Sandten.
In 1913-1914, he also worked as a director in Germany for the company Vitascope. He directed films such as Pauline (1914), often with Thea Sandten in the lead. The outbreak of the First World War abruptly ended Henri Étiévant 's film career. Between 1915 and 1919, he was absentfrom the sets and only returned behind the camera after his military service in 1920.
He retook his career as a director with the film Neuf / Nine (1920). In the 1920s, he focused on directing such films as La fille de Camargue (1921) with Stacia Napierkowska and Charles Vanel, La fin de Monte-Carlo / The End of Monte Carlo (1927) with Jean Angelo and Francesca Bertini, and La sirène des tropiques / Siren of the Tropics (Mario Nalpas, Henri Étiévant, 1927) with Josephine Baker.
With Nalpas, he co-directed his last film, the late silent film La symphonie pathétique / Pathetic Symphony (Mario Nalpas, Henri Étiévant, 1930). He would still act in five sound films in the 1930s, such as the comedy La bande à Bouboule / Bouboule's Gang (Léon Mathot, 1931). After his participation in Julien Duvivier's minor work L'Homme du jour / The Man of the Hour (1936), the 66-year-old Étiévant withdrew completely from the film business.
Henri Étiévant died in 1953 in Paris at the age of 83. He was the father of the stage and screen actress Yvette Étiévant (1922-2003), who peaked on stage in the 1950s and 1960s, and played in countless films and TV series between 1945 and the 1990s.
French postcard by Europe, no. 227. Photo: Sélections Cinégraphiques Maurice Rouhier. Francesca Bertini and Jean Angelo in La fin de Monte-Carlo (Henri Étiévant, Mario Nalpas, 1927).
French promotional postcard. Photo: Josephine Baker in La Sirène des tropiques / Siren of the Tropics (Mario Nalpas, Henri Étiévant, 1927). Collection: Marlene Pilaete.
French promotional postcard. Photo: Josephine Baker in La Sirène des tropiques / Siren of the Tropics (Mario Nalpas, Henri Étiévant, 1927). The script was written by Maurice Dekobra. Collection: Marlene Pilaete.
French postcard, no. 9. Photo: Galy.
Sources: Les Archives du Spectacle (French), Wikipedia (French and German), and IMDb.






















































