Yves Vincent

French film and television actor
Yves Vincent
Born(1921-08-05)5 August 1921
Thônes, France
Died6 January 2016(2016-01-06) (aged 94)
Montacher-Villegardin
OccupationActor
Years active1946-1988

Yves Vincent (5 August 1921 – 6 January 2016) was a French film and television actor.[1][2]

Biography

Born in Haute-Savoie , Yves Vincent spent a large part of his youth in Algeria where he started out in the troupe of the Comédie de Radio-Algérie.

In cinema, he made his first film in 1944 in Cairo with his mother, the prelude to a long career.

He appeared in numerous television films and soap operas. Between 1988 and 1991 , he played Judge Garonne in the television series Tribunal.

In October 2013, he published his memoirs: Do you want to smile with me?, published by Christian Navarro, where he recounts, among other things, his relationship with Ingrid Bergman , Edwige Feuillère and Brigitte Bardot. In 2015, with the same publisher, he published the novel Des Vagues à l'Âme. In late 2016, the actor's last autobiographical work was released posthumously: "4, boulevard Laferrière" (ed. Christian Navarro), in which he reveals fragments of his childhood and adolescence, as if his own disappearance was not an end.

His funeral took place onJanuary 13 , 2016 in a civil ceremony at the Joigny crematorium .

Selected filmography

  • Devil and the Angel (1946) - Robert
  • The Crowned Fish Tavern (1947) - Pierre Astor
  • The Sharks of Gibraltar (1947) - André Duval
  • The Renegade (1948) - Jean Costa
  • The Cavalier of Croix-Mort (1948) - Simon de Chabre
  • The Cupid Club (1949) - Morezzi
  • La maternelle (1949) - Dr. Libois
  • The Nude Woman (1949) - Pierre Bernier
  • The Dancer of Marrakesh (1949) - Jean Portal
  • Beware of Blondes (1950) - Luigi Costelli
  • Oriental Port (1950) - Vaucourt
  • Captain Ardant (1951) - Le capitaine Pierre Ardant
  • Tapage nocturne (1951) - Frank Varescot
  • My Wife Is Formidable (1951) - Le trompettiste (uncredited)
  • Si ça vous chante (1951)
  • The Case Against X (1952) - L'inspecteur Richard
  • Grand Gala (1952) - Pierre Bouvais
  • Sins of Rome (1953) - Octavius
  • Monsieur Scrupule, Gangster (1953) - M. Scrupule
  • Pity for the Vamps (1956) - André Larcher
  • Le circuit de minuit (1956) - Jean Gaillard
  • OSS 117 Is Not Dead (1957) - Boris Obarian
  • Federal Police (1958) - Inspecteur Giverny
  • Babette Goes to War (1959) - Capt. Darcy
  • Ce soir on tue (1959) - Le commissaire Van Eck
  • La dragée haute (1960) - De Marchelier
  • Alibi pour un meurtre (1961) - Ciello
  • Les nouveaux aristocrates (1961) - Le docteur Pierre Prullé-Rousseau
  • The Hideout (1962) - Doctor
  • Knights of Terror (1963) - Capitano Mirko
  • Muriel (1963) - L'homme du couple d'acheteurs
  • Anatomy of a Marriage: My Days with Jean-Marc (1964) - Granjouan
  • Anatomy of a Marriage: My Days with Françoise (1964) - Granjouan
  • Your Turn to Die (1967) - Felton
  • Le gendarme se marie (1968) - Le colonel
  • Hibernatus (1969) - Edouard Crépin-Jaujard
  • Her and She and Him (1970) - Mathias Decas
  • Le gendarme en balade (1970) - Le colonel de gendarmerie examinateur
  • Libido: The Urge to Love (1971) - The priest
  • Valparaiso, Valparaiso (1971) - Le maître de maison
  • Impossible Is Not French (1974) - Nadar
  • Les filles de Grenoble (1981) - Le conseiller
  • Surprise Party (1983) - M. Bazin
  • La rumba (1987) - Del Monte, l'ambassadeur d'Italie
  • La maison assassinée (1988) - The judge

References

  1. ^ Goble p.244
  2. ^ "Mort d'Yves Vincent, le colonel des Gendarmes de Saint-Tropez". Lefigaro.fr. 7 January 2016. Retrieved 2016-01-07.

Bibliography

  • Goble, Alan. The Complete Index to Literary Sources in Film. Walter de Gruyter, 1999.

External links

  • Yves Vincent at IMDb
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
International
  • ISNI
  • VIAF
National
  • France
  • BnF data
Other
  • IdRef


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