Jean-Paul Belmondo
AKA: Жан-Поль Бельмондо
Birthday: 1933-04-09
Died: 2021-09-06
Birthplace: Neuilly-sur-Seine, Seine [now Hauts-de-Seine], France
Jean-Paul Belmondo (born 9 April 1933 – 6 September 2021) was a French actor initially associated with the New Wave of the 1960s.
Born in Neuilly-sur-Seine, Hauts-de-Seine, west of Paris, Belmondo did not perform well in school, but developed a passion for boxing and football. Belmondo made his amateur boxing debut on 10 May 1949 in Paris, France, when he knocked out Rene DesMarais in one round. Belmondo's boxing career was undefeated, but brief. He won three straight first round knockout victories from 1949 to 1950.
His breakthrough role was in Jean-Luc Godard's Breathless (1960), which made him a major figure in the French New Wave. Later he acted in Jean-Pierre Melville's philosophical movie Leon Morin, Priest (1961) and in Melville's film noir crime film The Fingerman (Le Doulos, 1963) and Godard again with Pierrot le fou (1965). With That Man From Rio (1965) he switched to commercial, mainstream productions, mainly comedies and action films but did appear in the title role of Alain Resnais' masterpiece Stavisky (1974), which some critics regard as Belmondo's finest performance.
Until the mid-1980s, when he ceased to be one of France's biggest box-office stars, Belmondo's typical characters were either dashing adventurers or more cynical heroes. As he grew older, Belmondo preferred concentrating on his stage work, where he encountered success. He suffered a stroke in 2001 and had since been absent from the stage and the screen until 2009 when he appeared in Un homme et son chien (A man and his dog) which was his last performance.
Belmondo died on 6 September 2021 at his home in Paris, after a period of ill health, at the age of 88.
Description above from the Wikipedia article Jean-Paul Belmondo, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Filmography
Character: Michel Poiccard / László Kovács
Character: Self (archive footage)
Character: Ferdinand Griffon, 'Pierrot'
Character: Adrien Dufourquet
Character: Nicolas Philibert
Character: Roger Pilard, aka l'Alpagueur
Character: Alfred Lubitsch
Character: Michele Di Libero
Character: Mike Gaucher / Bruno Ferrari
Character: François Capella
Character: Un légionnaire
Character: Alexandre Dupré / Vicomte de Valombreuse
Character: Commissaire divisionnaire Philippe Jordan
Character: Arthur Lespinasse
Character: Louis-Dominique Bourguignon alias Cartouche
Character: Gabriel Fouquet
Character: Stephane Margelle
Character: Commissioner Jean Letellier
Character: Divisional commissioner Stanislas Borovitz / Antonio Cerutti
Character: Victor Vauthier
Character: Serge Alexandre Stavisky
Character: Arthur Lempereur
Character: Roberto La Rocca
Character: Self (archive footage)
Character: Jean-Paul Belmondo
Character: Henri Fortin / Jean Valjean
Character: Doctor Paul Simay
Character: François Merlin / Bob Saint-Clar
Character: François Leclercq
Character: Pierrot, un jeune de la bande d'Olga
Character: Jacques Trébois
Character: Sergeant Pierre Augagneur
Character: Giuliano Verdi
Character: Michel Thibault
Character: Georges Randal
Character: Julien Maillat
Character: Ferdinand Griffon (archive footage) (uncredited)
Character: Roberto Borgo, aka 'La Scoumoune'
Character: François Holin, aka Ho
Character: Victor-Emmanuel Chandebise / Poche
Character: Narrator / Presenter
Character: Professor Bébel
Character: le capitaine Il Livornese
Character: Gilles, l'amant (segment "L'Adultère")
Character: Self (archive footage)
Character: Self (archive footage)
Character: David Ladislas
Character: Self (archive footage)
Character: Self (archive footage)
Character: Self (archive footage)
Character: Erede Siciliano (uncredited)
Character: Self (archive footage)
Character: Self (archive footage)
Character: Self (archive footage)
Character: Self (archive footage)
Character: Cyrano de Bergerac
Character: Self (archive footage)