Michel Piccoli

Biography

Michel Jacques Daniel Piccoli was the son of Henri Piccoli, violinist and Marcelle Expert-Bezançon (1892-1990), pianist and daughter of the French industrialist and politician Charles Expert-Bezançon. In 1954, Michel Piccoli married actress Éléonore Hirt with whom he had a daughter, Anne-Cordélia Piccoli. In 1966, he married the singer Juliette Gréco, then in 1978 the screenwriter Ludivine Clerc, with whom he adopted two children of Polish origin, Inord and Missia. Placed in an establishment for problem children, the commitments of the young Piccoli, are made in opposition to his maternal grandfather, senator of the Third Republic, financier of the Radical Party, and important industrial painter, accused by the trade union left and by Georges Clemenceau, of having intoxicated his workmen through lead white which causes lead poisoning. Michel Piccoli then trained as an actor first with Andrée Bauer-Théraud and then during Simon. After an appearance as an extra in "Sortilèges" by Christian-Jaque in 1945, Michel Piccoli made his film debut in "Le Point Du Jour" by Louis Daquin. In the theater he distinguished himself with the Renaud-Barrault and Grenier-Hussot companies as well as at the Théâtre de Babylone. Noticed in the film "French Cancan" in 1954, he continued on stage and worked with directors Jacques Audiberti, Jean Vilar, Jean-Marie Serreau, Peter Brook, Luc Bondy, Patrice Chéreau and André Engel, and became also know in popular TV movies. Having become an atheist after a family bereavement, he met Luis Buñuel in 1956, and ironically took on the role of a priest in "La Mort En Ce Jardin". In 1959, he shot "Le Rendez-Vous De Noël", a short film by André Michel based on the short story by Malek Ouary "Le Noël Du Petit Cireur", in Algiers. The 1960s sounded his consecration, noticed in "Le Doulos" by Jean-Pierre Melville, he was revealed internationally with "Le Mépris" by Jean-Luc Godard alongside Brigitte Bardot. From then on, he toured with the greatest French and international filmmakers such as Alfred Hitchcock, Luis Buñuel, Youssef Chahine, Manoel de Oliveira... He began the 1980s with the interpretation prize at the Cannes festival in 1980, with "Le Saut Dans Le Vide" by Marco Bellocchio, and that of the Berlin festival in 1982, with "Une Étrange Affaire" by Pierre Granier-Deferre. . He worked with Jacques Doillon, Leos Carax, before trying his hand at directing. In 2001 he received the IX Europe Prize for Theatre. He was part of the jury of the 60th Cannes Film Festival in 2007, chaired by Stephen Frears. In 2011, he played in "Habemus Papam" by Nanni Moretti. The last film in which Michel Piccoli appears is the film "Le Goût Des Myrtilles", by Thomas de Thiers in 2013. Politically committed to the left, member of the Peace Movement (communist), Michel Piccoli distinguished himself by his positions against the National Front, and mobilized for Amnesty International. Michel Piccoli died on May 12, 2020 following a stroke in his mansion in Saint-Philbert-sur-Risle in Eure. His funeral takes place in Évreux on May 19, 2020, where he is cremated, his ashes are scattered within the family property.

Filmography

Paul Javal
Bernard Rougerie
Henri Husson
Jacques Granville
Max, inspector
Pierre Bérard
Simon Léotard
Georges Sarret
Inspector Ginko
Edmond Leroyer
Georges Sarrassin
René Cabourg, l'employé besogneux (Victime #2)
Werner Kreuz
Edgar Pisani
Inspector #1
Max Baumstein
Le deuxième préfet de police
Serlon de Savigny
Ferdinand (voice)
Themroc
Graham Tombsthay
Bertrand Malair
Edouard Frenhofer
Michel Boulard
Le grand Hou
Marquis de Sade
Father Lizzardi
Monsieur Monteil
Pierre Maury
Jean-Michel Venture de Paradis
Jean-Paul Chance
Giorgio's friend
Grezillo
Marie, la mère de Vincent
Marcel Spadice
Charles
Pierre
Akiva Liebskind
Capri / Bruno
Vidame de Pamiers
Chateaubriand (voice)
Mac Bee / frère Mac Bee
Saint-Ramé
Self
Henri Husson
Padre Amerin
acteur qui joue Simon
Damien Malleville
Mauro Ponticelli
Le directeur de l'aéro-club
Michel des Assantes
Edgar Piccoli
Lord Ariel Chatwick-West
Zio Tony
Self - Actor (archive footage)
Le roi Lear
Alexandre Saccard
Maurice Reverdy
(archive footage)
Désiré, l'homosexuel
Un journaliste aux archives (uncredited)
Raoul Bergeron
Man with the Wine Stain
Richard
Georges Feuvrier
Michel
L'avocat
Colonel Kassar
Michel Perrin
Père Jean-Marie
Henri Toussaint
L'inspecteur Vardier, de la P.J.
Console Publicola
Self (archive footage)
Franck Marchal
Jean, the reporter
Tío Agostino
Daddy
Friedrich Hofreiter
Caffarelli
Leonard Wilde
Self (archive footage)
Un villageois
François Desailly
Agostino (archive footage) (uncredited)
Ispettore Marchand
Leópold Scheitzer
Narrator (voice)
Dom Juan
Chvokhniev
Pasquerel (segment "Jeanne")
Le Capitaine Valorgueil
Robert Hansen
Valentin
L'homme de trop
Gilbert Valence
der Tölpel
Paul Belmont
Narrator (voice)
Frédéric Mallaire
Texte dit par (voice)
(archive footage)
Nuttheccio
Harald
Self (archive footage)
Commissioner Jacques Guimard
Michel
Narrator (voice)
Georges Gohelle
Prof. Heschel
Nikita Kruschev (segment "Rencontre unique")
Narrator (voice)
Paul Javal (archive footage)
Le baron de Leisenbohg
Self - Actor (archive footage)
L'enquêteur
Tom Brown, jeune
un inspecteur
Marcello
King Louis XVI (uncredited)
Mr. Dellerue (voice)
René Winterhalter
L'antiquaire
Lecoeur
Un journaliste aux archives
Michel Piccoli
Adam - Ram's father
Officer (uncredited)
Philippe Decharme (segment "Lucky la chance")
Jacques Forestier
Tommy Goudchote
Slim Spring
Récitant (voice)
Récitant (voice)
Récitant (voice)
Récitant (voice)
Récitant (voice)
Récitant (voice)
Self (archive footage)
Izquierdo dans l'émission de télévision 'Montserrat' (uncredited)
L'invité pressé au vernissage (uncredited)
Footage from La Belle Noiseuse