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Danièle Delorme

Danièle Delorme

Known For Acting
Birthday Oct 09, 1926
Died Oct 18, 2015 (89)
Birthplace Levallois-Perret, Hauts-de-Seine, France
Popularity 0.1 (history)
Updated Aug 09, 2025 (Update)
Entry Date Apr 30, 2024
Links TMDb IMDb
Biography

Gabrielle Danièle Marguerite Andrée Girard (9 October 1926 – 17 October 2015), known by her stage name Danièle Delorme, was a French actress and film producer, famous for her roles in films directed by Marc Allégret, Julien Duvivier or Yves Robert. Delorme was born in Levallois-Perret, Hauts-de-Sei ... ne, one of four children to the well-known painter, poster-maker and theater-designer André Girard and his wife Andrée (nee Jouan). Girard maintained a studio in Venice in 1936–37 and in Manhattan in 1938. Back in France he was not called up in 1939. After the Battle of France, M. Girard removed to Antibes, then a free-zone and set up a network which provided recruiting and spying work for the French resistance. It was during this time that young Delorme began her acting career. In 1940 at the age of 14 Delorme began acting and played a series of minor roles before she began acting in film. Two years later, owing to her father's contacts, she was able at 16 years old (at the time using the name Danièle Girard) to secure a bit part in The Beautiful Adventure (La Belle aventure (1942)). Two years later director Marc Allégret again used Delorme, this time in a large role. This time she performed on the stage name she would use for the rest of her career, Danièl Delorme. One story developed that she took the name in order to hide from the Gestapo her relationship to her father. But the suggestion came from character actor Bernard Blier, who performed with her in her second film to take the name from the heroine of Victor Hugo's play Marion Delorme. (Delorme would co-star with Blier two decades later in the philosophical courtroom criminal drama, The Seventh Juror (Le septième juré (1962)). During the first decade of her career Delorme played delicate, demure, bright young women, roles for which she was physically fitted. Her first husband Daniel Gélin, who also performed in The Beautiful Adventure, said she had "the face of a little girl, an upturned nose with passionate nostrils, the lips of a child, the body of a woman and a certain way about her that turns heads." Richard W. Seaver of the New York Times described her as "a winsome wisp of an actress, with her soft smile and grey eyes." These features landed her a breakthrough role in Miquette et sa mère (1949). In 1949, she also played the title role in Gigi (1949 film), before Leslie Caron's success in the same role in the American (musical) version (Gigi (1958 film)) . Also notable was her performance as femme fatale in Julien Duvivier's Voici le temps des assassin (1956) (Deadlier Than the Male in the US and Twelve Hours to Live in the UK), co-starring with Jean Gabin. In 1960 Delorme joined more than 140 intellectuals, teachers, writers and celebrities in signing a manifesto supporting the right of French conscripts to refuse military service in Algeria. As a result, the French government on 28 September issued a ban against all signatories from appearing on state-run radio or television or in state-run theaters. At the same time the information minister said that another cabinet order was in preparation that would deny government funding to any film project in which any signatory appeared. ... Source: Article "Danièle Delorme" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA.

Known For

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Profile
Profile
Filmography

Touch Me Not

Touch Me Not

1974

as Lilian

Cléo from 5 to 7

Cléo from 5 to 7

1962

as The Flower Vendor / Actress in Silent Film

No data available

No data available

No data available

Organization Category Movie
Television Credits

L'Affaire Saint-Romans

as Marguerite Lallier

Episodes: 6

First Aired: May 27, 1988

Mafiosa

as Filipponi

Episodes: 1

First Aired: Dec 12, 2006

Spécial cinéma

as Self

Episodes: 1

First Aired: Sep 25, 1974

Le Grand Échiquier

as Self

Episodes: 1

First Aired: Jan 12, 1972

Midi trente

as Self

Episodes: 1

First Aired: Mar 06, 1972

Cinépanorama

as Self

Episodes: 1

First Aired: Feb 04, 1956

Vivement dimanche

as Self

Episodes: 1

First Aired: Sep 20, 1998

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