
Pierre Repp
Biography
Pierre Repp (5 November 1909 in Saint-Pol-sur-Ternoise, France – 1 November 1986 in Plessis-Trévise, France) was a French humorist and actor. His real name was Pierre Alphonse Léon Frédéric Bouclet. On 14 August 1930, he married Ferdinande Alice Andrée Bouclet in Lille. He is famous in France for his unique comic talent. He used to simulate stuttering while talking, in a humoristic way, trying to pronounce some words and finally replacing them by others. In a famous French sketch, "Les crêpes", he explained the recipe that way, with sentences like this one: "Then you add some mamerlade, oh sorry ! Some marlamade... Uh! Me, I pour some chocolate". Pierre Repp appeared in many theatre plays and TV shows, but mainly in music-hall and cabarets in Paris or on tour. Pierre Repp has his place in the French cinéma story due to many "third-roles" in about forty films. Source: Article "Pierre Repp" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Also Known As
Movie Appearances

The 400 Blows
as Professeur d'anglais
1959

Un clair de Lune à Maubeuge
as Le secrétaire bègue
1962

Donkey Skin
as Thibaut
1970

La merveilleuse tragédie de Lourdes
1933

A King Without Distraction
as Ravanel
1963

Candide or The Optimism in the 20th Century
as Le pasteur (uncredited)
1960

Sous le signe de Monte-Cristo
as Jauffrey
1968

The Busybody
as Strawberry lover
1961
La bande à Bobo
as Spiguy
1963

L'Or du duc
as Fabric seller
1965

La Grande Maffia
as Prime Minister
1971

The Love Game
as Le locataire bègue
1960

I Don't Know Much, But I'll Say Everything
as Vernier
1973

Hello Smile!
as Mayor
1956

Black Humor
as segment 1 'La Bestiole'
1965

Prends ton passe-montagne, on va à la plage
as Le client du garage
1983

Cartouche
as Le marquis de Griffe
1962

Césarin joue les 'étroits' mousquetaires
as Césarin
1962

Vice Squad
1959

Springtime in Paris
1957






