Guy de Gastyne | |||||||||||||||||
Birth Date: | 10 May 1888 | ||||||||||||||||
Birth Place: | Neuilly-sur-Seine, Hauts-de-Seine, France | ||||||||||||||||
Death Place: | Creteil, Val-de-Marne, France | ||||||||||||||||
Occupation: | Art director | ||||||||||||||||
Yearsactive: | 1930–1952 (film) | ||||||||||||||||
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Guy de Gastyne (pronounced as /fr/; 10 May 1888 – 3 February 1972) was a French art director.[1] In his youth, he was a footballer who played as a goalkeeper for Racing Club de France and for the French national team in the 1911 UIAFA European Football Tournament at Roubaix.[2] [3]
He was the brother of the film director Marco de Gastyne.[4]
Guy de Gastyne was born in Neuilly-sur-Seine on 10 May 1888,[1] and he began his football career at Racing de France in the early 1910s. On 30 April 1911, Gastyne started in the final of the 1911 USFSA Football Championship in Marseille, which ended in a 2–3 loss to Stade Helvétique de Marseille.[5] In the preview of the 1911 Coupe Dewar final between USA Clichy and, the French newspaper L'Auto (the future L'Équipe) stated that Clichy's goalkeeper Pierre Chayriguès was the second-best in the capital after Gastyne.[6] In the following year, on 14 April, he started in the final of the 1912 Coupe Dewar, helping his side to a 3–1 win over Club Français.[7]
Gastyne made four unofficial appearances for France (UIAFA), being the goalkeeper of the French squad that participated in the 1911 UIAFA European Football Tournament at Roubaix, an unofficial European Championship organized by UIAFA, in which France was knocked out in the semifinals by Bohemia (1–4).[2] [3] He played his third match for UIAFA's France on 1 January 1912, in a friendly match against AFA's England in London, which ended in a 7–1 loss,[3] and then played his fourth and last match in the following month, on 20 February, against Catalonia, keeping a clean-sheet in a 7–0 victory (he only had to touch the ball three times).[3] [8] He is thus the most capped player of UIAFA's France with four appearances, alongside club teammates, Alphonse Nicol and Auguste Schalbart, plus Carlos Bacrot and Victor Denis.[9]
After the First World War, Gastyne became a talented painter, and remained so until the mid-1920s.[10] He then developed into a art director, and his first work as such was Little Lise in 1930.[1] His most notable works were O Silêncio é de Ouro (1947), Mataram o Pai Natal (1941), and Onde Está a Felicidade? (1934).[1]
Gastyne died in Creteil on 3 February 1972, at the age of 83.[1]