NOTEWORTHY DEATHS

Director of Oscar winner Babette’s Feast

COPENHAGEN, Denmark - Gabriel Axel, the first Dane to win an Oscar for best foreign film with Babette’s Feast, which he directed, has died at the age of 95.

His daughter Karin Moerch said in a statement that he died Sunday “quietly and peacefully after a long and eventful life.” She did not say where he died nor give the cause of death.

Born April 18, 1918, in Denmark’s second-largest city, Aarhus, Axel divided his time between his homeland and France. He grew up in Paris where his father owned a factory and at age 18 he returned to Denmark to work as a carpenter making furniture.

But the theater drew him, and he enrolled in the Danish Royal Theater Actors’ School, graduating in 1945.

Axel was born Gabriel Axel Moerch but he dropped his last name when he joined the theater troupe of French film and stage artist Louis Jouvet in Paris. Axel directed several large projects for French television, then returned to Denmark to produce shows for Denmark’s public broadcaster and direct several films in the 1950s and 1960s. He also acted in films.

His international breakthrough came in 1987 with Babette’s Feast, based on a novel by Danish writer Karen Blixen, who wrote under the pen name Isak Dinesen. The movie is about a 19th-century Parisian woman, played by French actress Stephan Audran, who finds shelter in a remote, puritanical Danish village, living with two sisters who maintain a strict religious philosophy.

Axel’s works include Prince of Jutland, a 1994 film that tells the story of Amled, the Danish prince whose life inspired Shakespeare’s Hamlet.

Arkansas, Pages 8 on 02/11/2014

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