Bio

Finding international fame with his role as the producer of a film within a film in François Truffaut's acclaimed Day for Night (1973), French actor Jean Champion would become one of France's most celebrated and dependable character actors. With roles in such popular films as The Umbrellas of Cherbourg (1964) and the cult TV series Belphegor, Champion would deeply ingrain himself into French film history by working with some of the most celebrated directors of his time and moving effortlessly between roles in television and film. Born in Chalon-sur-Saone, France, in March 1914, Champion began refining his love for acting on stage, performing with such theater greats as Jacques Copeau and Georges Piteoff before making his eventual transition into film and television. For nearly 30 years, he would appear in the films of such acclaimed French directors as Luis Bunuel (The Phantom of Liberty [1974]), Alain Resnais (Muriel [1963]), and Jacques Demy (The Umbrellas of Cherbourg). Champion made his final film appearance in Roger Vadim's television adaptation of playwright Sacha Guitry's My Father Was Right in 1996. Plagued with health problems later in life, Jean Champion died in the same town he was born in, on May 23, 2000. He was 87.
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Jean Champion
March 9, 1914 - May 23, 2001 (aged 87)
Chalon-sur-Saône, Saône-et-Loire, France

Bio

Finding international fame with his role as the producer of a film within a film in François Truffaut's acclaimed Day for Night (1973), French actor Jean Champion would become one of France's most celebrated and dependable character actors. With roles in such popular films as The Umbrellas of Cherbourg (1964) and the cult TV series Belphegor, Champion would deeply ingrain himself into French film history by working with some of the most celebrated directors of his time and moving effortlessly between roles in television and film. Born in Chalon-sur-Saone, France, in March 1914, Champion began refining his love for acting on stage, performing with such theater greats as Jacques Copeau and Georges Piteoff before making his eventual transition into film and television. For nearly 30 years, he would appear in the films of such acclaimed French directors as Luis Bunuel (The Phantom of Liberty [1974]), Alain Resnais (Muriel [1963]), and Jacques Demy (The Umbrellas of Cherbourg). Champion made his final film appearance in Roger Vadim's television adaptation of playwright Sacha Guitry's My Father Was Right in 1996. Plagued with health problems later in life, Jean Champion died in the same town he was born in, on May 23, 2000. He was 87.

Appears In

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Day for Night poster art
Le Cercle Rouge poster art
The Phantom of Liberty poster art
Cleo From 5 to 7 poster art
The Umbrellas of Cherbourg poster art
Special Section poster art
Mr. Klein poster art
Life and Nothing But poster art
Clean Slate poster art
Le Crabe Tambour poster art
Muriel, or The Time of Return poster art
The Hatter's Ghost poster art
Love Unto Death poster art
The Thief of Paris poster art
March or Die poster art
The Passion of Bernadette poster art
The Blood of Others poster art
Le maître d'école poster art
Félicité poster art
COMPANY

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