
Charles Denner
Biography
Charles Denner (29 May 1926 – 10 September 1995) was a French actor born to a Jewish family in Poland. During his 30-year career he worked with some of France's greatest directors of the time, including Louis Malle, Claude Chabrol, Jean-Luc Godard, Costa-Gavras, Claude Lelouch and François Truffaut who gave him two of his most memorable roles, as Fergus in The Bride Wore Black (1968) and Bertrand Morane in The Man Who Loved Women (1977). Description above from the Wikipedia article Charles Denner, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Movie Appearances

Elevator to the Gallows
as L'Adjoint du Commissaire Cherrier
1958

The Man Who Loved Women
as Bertrand Morane
1977

A Captain's Honor
as Maître Gillard
1982

Z
as Manuel
1969

A Thousand Billion Dollars
as Walter, private detective
1982

Vivement Truffaut
as Self / Bertrand (archive footage)
1985

The Down-in-the-Hole Gang
as Ministre des travaux public
1974

The Bride Wore Black
as Fergus
1968

Bluebeard
as Henri Landru
1963

Life Upside Down
as Jacques Valin
1964

The Married Couple of the Year Two
as Traveller
1971

The Sleeping Car Murders
as Bob, l'amant sincère de Georgette Thomas
1965

A Gorgeous Girl Like Me
as Arthur
1972

Law Breakers
as Graziani
1971

Money Money Money
as Simon Duroc
1972

The Night Caller
as Inspector Moissac
1975

The First Time
as Father
1976

The Two of Us
as Claude's Father
1967

Golden Eighties
as M. Schwartz
1986

The Blue Panther
as Johnson
1965
