Background
Edward Constantinowsky was born in Los Angeles to immigrant parents, a Russian father and Polish mother.
Edward Constantinowsky was born in Los Angeles to immigrant parents, a Russian father and Polish mother.
He became well known for a series of French B movies in which he played secret agent Lemmy Caution and is now best remembered for his role in Jean-Luc Godard"s philosophical science fiction film Alphaville (1965). Constantine also appeared in films by Rainer Werner Fassbinder (as himself in Beware of a Holy Whore 1971), Lars von Trier, and Mika Kaurismäki. He continued reprising the role of Lemmy Caution well into his 70s.
His final appearance as the character was in Jean-Luc Godard"s Germany Year 90 Nine Zero (1991).
In pursuit of a singing career, he went to Vienna for voice training, but when he returned to America his career didn"t take off and he started taking work as a film extra. Having failed to make a career in America, Constantine returned to Europe in the 1950s and started singing and performing in Parisian cabarets.
He was noticed by Edith Piaf, who cast him in the musical Louisiana p"tite Lili. Constantine also helped Piaf with translations for her 1956 album Louisiana Vie En Rose / Édith Piaf Sings In English, so that he has songwriting credits on the English versions of some of her most famous songs (especially "Hymne à l"amour"/"Hymn to Love").
Constantine eventually became a French citizen and enjoyed great popularity in several European countries, including France and Germany.
When not playing Lemmy Caution, Constantine"s character would still typically be a suave-talking, seductive, smooth guy, although he often played this for laughs. He turned his accent and perceived American cockiness to advantage in such roles, and later described his film persona as having been "James Bond before James Bond". One of his most notable roles was in Jean-Luc Godard"s Alphaville (1965), in which he reprised (to a more radical end) the role of Lemmy Caution, in a departure from the style of his other films.
His box-office appeal in France waned in the mid-1960s.
Having remarried to a German television producer, he eventually relocated to Germany, where he worked as a character actor, appearing in German television dramas as well as film. Constantine later claimed he had never taken his acting career seriously, as he considered himself to be a singer by trade, and had been an actor strictly for the money.
He nevertheless worked with directors such as Godard and Rainer Werner Fassbinder, and his last notable film appearance was in Lars Von Trier"s Europa in 1991. He had taken up the part of Lemmy for the last time in the same year, in Godard"s experimental film Germany Year 90 Nine Zero.
Eddie Constantine died of a heart attack on February 25, 1993, aged 75.