
Philippe Noiret
Biography
Philippe Noiret (1 October 1930 – 23 November 2006) was a French film actor. Noiret was born in Lille, France, the son of Lucy (Heirman) and Pierre Noiret, a clothing company representative. He was an indifferent student and attended several prestigious Paris schools, including the Lycée Janson de Sailly. He failed several times to pass his baccalauréat exams, so he decided to study theater. He trained at the Centre Dramatique de l'Ouest and toured with the Théâtre National Populaire for seven years, where he met Monique Chaumette, whom he married in 1962. During that time he developed a career as a nightclub comedian in a duo act with Jean-Pierre Darras, in which he played Louis XIV in an extravagant wig opposite Darras as the dramatist Jean Racine. In these roles they satirized the politics of Charles de Gaulle, Michel Debré and André Malraux. Noiret's screen debut (1949) was an uncredited role in Gigi. In 1955 he appeared in La Pointe Courte directed by Agnès Varda. She said later, "I discovered in him a breadth of talent rare in a young actor." Sporting a pudding-basin haircut, Noiret played a lovelorn youth in the southern fishing port of Sète. He later admitted: "I was scared stiff, and fumbled my way through the part—I am totally absent in the film." He was not cast again until 1960 in Zazie dans le Métro. After playing second leads in Georges Franju's Thérèse Desqueyroux in 1962, and in Le Capitaine Fracasse, from Théophile Gautier's romantic adventure, he became a regular on the French screen, without being cast in major roles until A Matter of Resistance directed by Jean-Paul Rappeneau in 1966. He became a star in France with Yves Robert's Alexandre le Bienheureux. "When I began to have success in the movies," Noiret told film critic Joe Leydon at the Cannes Film Festival in 1989, "it was a big surprise for me. For actors of my generation—all the men of 50 or 60 now in French movies—all of us were thinking of being stage actors. Even people like Jean-Paul Belmondo, all of us, we never thought we'd become movie stars. So, at the beginning, I was just doing it for the money, and because they asked me to do it. But after two or three years of working on movies, I started to enjoy it, and to be very interested in it. And I'm still very interested in it, because I've never really understood how it works. I mean, what is acting for the movies? I've never really understood." Noiret was cast primarily as the Everyman character, although he did not hesitate to accept controversial roles, such as in La Grande Bouffe, a film about suicide by overeating, which caused a scandal at Cannes in 1973, and in 1991 André Téchiné cast Noiret in J'embrasse pas (I Don't Kiss), as a melancholy old homosexual obsessed with young male flesh. And in 1987, in The Gold Rimmed Glasses based on Giorgio Bassani's novel about the cramped social life of post-war Ferrara in Italy, he played an elderly and respectable doctor who is gradually suspected of being a covert homosexual with a passion for a beautiful young man (Rupert Everett). Noiret won his first César Award for his role in Vieux Fusil in 1976. His second César came in 1990 for his role in Life and Nothing But. ... Source: Article "Philippe Noiret" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA.
Also Known As
Movie Appearances

The Troubles We've Seen
as Self
1994

My New Partner
as René Boirond
1984

Topaz
as Henri Jarre
1969

The Old Gun
as Julien Dandieu
1975

La Grande Bouffe
as Philippe
1973

The Tender Age
as Pourtalain
1968

Zazie dans le Métro
as Oncle Gabriel
1960

D'Artagnan's Daughter
as D'Artagnan
1994

The Down-in-the-Hole Gang
as Gaspard de Montfermeil
1974

A Matter of Resistance
as Jérôme
1966

Fort Saganne
as Dubreuilh
1984

The Most Gentle Confessions
as Inspecteur Muller
1971

La Barricade du Point-du-Jour
as Eugène Pottier
1978

Captain Fracasse
as Hérode
1961

Ballad for a Hoodlum
as L'inspecteur Mathieu
1963

The Postman
as Pablo Neruda
1994

My Friends
as Il Perozzi
1975

A Woman at Her Window
as Raoul Malfosse
1976

Cinema Paradiso
as Alfredo
1988

The Secret
as Thomas Berthelot
1974
TV Appearances

Nulle part ailleurs
as Self
1987

Spécial cinéma
as Self
1974
Midi trente
as Self
1972

Les Rendez-vous du dimanche
as Self
1975

Discorama
as Self - Host
1959

Champs-Elysées
as Self
1982

Il était une fois Champs-Élysées
as Self (archive footage)
2022

Apostrophes
as Self
1975

Discorama
as Self
1959

Vivement dimanche
as Self
1998

Stars 90
as Self
1990

30 millions d'amis
as Self
1976