Brigitte Fossey

Biography

Brigitte Florence Fossey (born 15 June 1946) is a French actress. The daughter of a schoolteacher, Fossey was five years old when she was cast by director René Clément to star in his film, Forbidden Games. Fossey played the role of an innocent child orphaned by World War II. The film won numerous awards worldwide, including the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, and Fossey was hired by American actor/director Gene Kelly for his 1957 film, The Happy Road. When Fossey was ten years old her parents took her out of the film business so she could receive proper schooling. While completing her education, Fossey studied piano and dance and then went on to work in Geneva, Switzerland as an interpreter/translator. In 1967, at age twenty, after studying acting at Yves Furet "Studio d'Entrainement de l'Acteur" in Paris, Fossey was offered the female lead by director Jean-Gabriel Albicocco for his film Le Grand Meaulnes. As an adult Fossey acted both on stage and in film, working with French directors such as François Truffaut and Bertrand Blier. Fluent in English, Fossey has appeared in several Hollywood motion pictures, including a 1979 role as the wife of Paul Newman in the Robert Altman-directed film, Quintet. In 1982, she was a member of the jury at the 32nd Berlin International Film Festival. During the 1990s, she began performing in television productions. Brigitte Fossey has a daughter from her marriage to director Jean-François Adam, whom she met while making his 1970 film M comme Mathieu. Source: Article "Brigitte Fossey" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA.

Filmography

Françoise Beretton
Françoise Beretton
Geneviève Bigey
Self - Actress
Lisa Braun
Woman on the train
Self / Geneviève (archive footage)
Catherine
Karen Reinhardt
Dominique "Waterloo" Austerlitz
Yvonne de Galais
Catherine
Suzanne Dufour
Vivia, Essex's Wife
Julie de Frémont
Judith Askelevicz
Sister Maria Claire
Janine Duval
Foreman's wife
Voice of Marie (voice)
Marie-Sophie Merceron
Mère de Marie
Louise Morand
Andrée Léo (segment "La semaine sanglante")
Jeanne Borghese
Jeanne / Murielle
Mathilde Auger