Birth Day: 1928-01-23
Place of birth: Paris, France
Jeanne Moreau (23 January 1928 – 31 July 2017) was a French actress, singer, screenwriter, and director. She made her theatrical debut in 1947, and established herself as one of the leading actresses of the Comédie-Française. She began playing small roles in films in 1949 and eventually achieved prominence as the star of Lift to the Scaffold (UK)/Elevator to the Gallows (USA) (1958), directed by Louis Malle, and Jules et Jim (1962), directed by François Truffaut. Most prolific during the 1960s, Moreau continued to appear in films until her death in 2017, at the age of 89. Moreau was the recipient of a César Award for Best Actress, a BAFTA Award for Best Foreign Actress and a Cannes Film Festival Best Actress Award for individual performances, and several lifetime awards.
Credits
-
As Self - Actress (archive footage)
-
As Self - Actress (archive footage)
-
As Self (archive footage)
-
As Self / Various Roles (archive footage)
-
As Self (archive footage)
-
As Self - Actress (archive footage)
-
As Madeleine
-
As Self
-
As Self (archive footage)
-
As Frida
-
As Narrator (voice)
-
As Candidinha
-
As Gaby
-
As Marie
-
As Self
-
As Aunt Eléonore (voice)
-
As Narrator
-
As Jeanne
-
As Self (archive footage)
-
As Self
-
As Agathe Falsen
-
As Rivka
-
As Josette
-
As Self
-
As Françoise
-
As Ruth Warriner
-
As The old woman / Self (segment "Trois Minutes")
-
As Laurence
-
As Jeanne Moreau
-
As Madame Paule
-
As Self
-
As Mahaut d'Artois
-
As Laura
-
As Novinar
-
As Self
-
As Léo
-
As Taxi Passenger at Marseille Airport (uncredited)
-
As Lisa (old)
-
As Marguerite Duras
-
As Anna Shermann
-
As Self
-
As Alessandra Wolf (Licy)
-
As Charlotte-Laure
-
As Grande Dame
-
As Libra
-
As Eglantine
-
As Elizabeth
-
As Self (archive footage)
-
As Adrienne Mark
-
As Nana
-
As Mr. Cinéma's First Ex-wife
-
As Friend
-
As Self (segment "The Deep") (archive footage)
-
As Self
-
As Self (archive footage)
-
As Angelique
-
As Sister Banville
-
As Rose
-
As Lili
-
As Writer's Wife
-
As Tete
-
As Hélène Sauveterre
-
As Narrator
-
As The Woman
-
As Woman
-
As Self
-
As Lady M
-
As Edith Farber
-
As La Doria
-
As Self
-
As Armande
-
As Self
-
As French narrator (voice)
-
As Self
-
As Sabine
-
As Self
-
As Barbesitzerin
-
As Marie-Aude Schneider
-
As Ines
-
As Récitante / Narrator / Self / Catherine
-
As Self
-
As Herself
-
As Marie-Pierre
-
As Madame Benoît-Lambert
-
As Lysiane
-
As Lou
-
As Lili Marlene
-
As Hélène
-
As La narratrice (voice) (uncredited)
-
As Didi
-
As Sarah
-
As Florence Klein
-
As Sylvana
-
As Maria
-
As Berthe
-
As The Singer (segment "Quand l'amour meurt")
-
As Renee Vibert
-
As Jeanne Pirolle
-
As Self
-
As L'autre femme
-
As La voix de la nostalgie (voice)
-
As Myriam Bingeot
-
As Madeleine
-
As Martine Bernard
-
As Herself
-
As Herself
-
As Self
-
As Diane Vallier
-
As Self
-
As Virginie Ducrot
-
As Julie Kohler
-
As Catherine
-
As Anna
-
As Mimi Guillotine (segment "Mademoiselle Mimi")
-
As Mademoiselle
-
As The Marchioness of Frinton (archiveFootage)
-
As Self
-
As Doll Tearsheet
-
As Maria II
-
As Céléstine
-
As Christine
-
As The Marchioness of Frinton
-
As Mata Hari
-
As French Woman
-
As Eva
-
As Cathy / Mme Volney
-
As Jacqueline 'Jackie' Demaistre
-
As Eva Olivier
-
As Catherine
-
As Marika Burstner
-
As Woman in Bar (uncredited)
-
As Lidia
-
As Narrator (voice)
-
As Ljuba
-
As Anne Desbarèdes
-
As Mère Marie de l'Incarnation
-
As Juliette Valmont
-
As Woman with Dog
-
As Florence Carala
-
As Jeanne Tournier
-
As Jeanne Fortin
-
As Jacqueline Tourieu
-
As Gloria Decrey
-
As Florence
-
As Agnès Vanaux
-
As Gina
-
As Angèle Ribot
-
As Alice
-
As Fernande
-
As Marianne Déjazet
-
As Marguerite de Valois, "La Reine Margot"
-
As Josy
-
As Jeanne Plisson
-
As Mona Rémi, la femme de Paul
-
As Rosie Facibey
-
As Julie, la serveuse
-
As Suzanne Dubreuil
-
As Marie Winter
-
As La môme Pâquerette
-
As Martine Annequin
-
As Michèle