
Jacques Dumesnil
Actor
Born: November 9, 1903 (94 years old)
Died: May 8, 1998
Place of birth: Paris, France
Biography
Jacques Dumesnil (born Marie Émile Eugène André Joly ; 9 November 1903 – 8 May 1998) was a French film and television actor. Jacques Dumesnil was born as Marie Émile Eugène André Joly on November 9, 1903, in Paris, France. Before becoming an actor, he received training as a mechanical engineer. After starting as a secretary at the aviation school, he became an industrial designer, a profession he left to devote himself to the theater. He adopted the pseudonym Dumesnil because of the admiration he had to French actor Camille Dumény. He started out as a fanciful singer in a café located in Paris Place de l'Hôtel de Ville , he was paid in sandwiches and glasses of beer. Dumesnil started on stage in 1927 and divided his career between theater and cinema. Having spent two years at the Comédie-Française , he played among other things in Les Tontons flingueurs and provided the French voice of Charlie Chaplin in Monsieur Verdoux (1947) and A King in New York (1957). His role as Duke of Plessis-Vaudreuil in the television series Au Plaisir de Dieu , earned him a resurgence of popularity and the 7 d'Or for best actor. Jacques Dumesnil had a son, Pierre Joly dit Dumesnil , who was a French swimming champion and participated in the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki , Finland.
Filmography (19)
- Crooks in Clover (1963, ★ 7.7)
- Behind the Facade (1939, ★ 7.8)
- Anna (1951, ★ 7.2)
- 56, rue Pigalle (1949, ★ 5.8)
- Plucking the Daisy (1956, ★ 6.2)
- Twisted Mistress (1942, ★ 6.4)
- Return at Dawn (1938, ★ 7)
- All the World's Memory (1956, ★ 7.1)
- The King of the Champs-Élysées (1934, ★ 5.4)
- Lucrezia Borgia (1935, ★ 5.1)
- The Marriage of Chiffon (1942, ★ 6)
- Life Together (1958, ★ 5.7)
- Pierre and Jean (1943, ★ 6.4)
- The Farm of Seven Sins (1949, ★ 5.7)
- Napoleon (1955, ★ 6.2)
- Ulysses (1954, ★ 6.5)
- The Count of Bragelonne (1954, ★ 5.2)
- If Paris Were Told to Us (1956, ★ 5.7)
- Famous Love Affairs (1961, ★ 3.7)