Jean-Claude Dauphin

Jean-Claude Dauphin, born Claude Legrand on March 16, 1948 in Boulogne-Billancourt, is a French actor. He is the son of actor Claude Dauphin and actress Maria Mauban, the grand-son of the poet Maurice Étienne Legrand and nephew host Jean Nohain, his father's brother. At Lycée Paul-Valéry in Paris, he studied in the class of Latinist Bernard Mortureux, a specialist in Seneca. His debut, in 1968, in Adolphe ou l'Âge tendre (Adolphe or the tender Age), directed by Bernard Toublanc-Michel, made him famous. In 1969, he plays Claude Jade's fiancé in The Witness. At the time, Claude Jade and Jean-Claude Dauphin were a couple. Jade later wrote in her autobiography Baisers envolés: "He was charming, funny, intelligent, and I was not long in going out with him. With our fair complexion and fine features, we could have played a brother and a sister." Gérard Blain hired him in 1970 for The Friends, a gay romance which won the Golden Leopard at the Locarno International Film Festival, and in 1972 Bernard Paul gave him the lead role alongside Dominique Labourier in Beau Masque (Handsome Face). He plays alongside Annie Girardot and Philippe Noiret in Edouard Molinaro's La Mandarine, and alongside Isabelle Adjani in the television series Le Secret des Flamands. Other films in the 1970s: Le Hasard et la Violence, Les Suspects, Hugues-le-loup, Dracula and Son... In 1980, he played Ulysses alongside Nicole Jamet in The Inconnue of Arras by Raymond Rouleau. He is also the voice-over or the reciter of many documentaries of French television. In 1981, he was Ricky in Choice of Arms by Alain Corneau and participated, in 1984, in Souvenirs, Souvenirs. One of his most important roles is that of Clovis, the hero of Adieu la vie, directed by Maurice Dugowson in 1986. In 1987, he played with Guy Marchand and Caroline Cellier in Charlie Dingo by Gilles Béhat, and with Juliette Binoche in The Unbearable Lightness of Being. One of his latest film hits is his role in Benoît Jacquot's The School of Flesh (1998) with Isabelle Huppert. Later movies are including Léa (2011). Since the 1990 he worked more for television where he met again his former fiancée Claude Jade in Sentiments mortels, an episode of TV series Navarro. Source: Article "Jean-Claude Dauphin" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.

Known For

Birth Location Boulogne-Billancourt, Hauts-de-Seine, France
Born 1948-03-16

Movies

Un mauvais garçon as Yves Fontanelle
2020
Murder In La Rochefoucauld as Duc Thibaut de l'Essile
2019
Brother and Sister as George Armant
2012
Like Stone Lions in the Gateway into Night as Narrator (French voice)
2012
La grande peinture as Le Ministre
2012
Accusé Mendès France as Maître Fonlupt
2011
LOL (Laughing Out Loud) as Le ministre
2009
The Second Wind as Jacques
2007
Tender Souls as Père de Claire et Emilie
2001
La Tour Montparnasse Infernale as Le commissaire
2001
Six-Pack as Fouquier
2000
1999
Why Not Me? as Alain
1999
1999
The School of Flesh as Louis-Guy
1998
1997
Le Poids d'un secret as Jean Monceau
1996
Samson le magnifique as Le Govain
1995
1993
Netchaïev est de retour as Philippe Martel
1991
1990
Champagne Charlie as Ernest
1989
Charlie Dingo as Jupin
1987
Nuit d'ivresse as Le deuxième flic
1986
Yiddish Connection as Toussaint
1986
Une jeunesse as Vietti
1983
1983
Choice of Arms as Ricky
1981
Au bon beurre as Léon Lécuyer
1981
Last Exit Before Roissy as Jean-Yves, le sous-directeur du Prisunic
1977
Dracula and Son as Cristéa/Christian
1976
The Suspects as Solnes
1974
Chance and Violence as Gilbert Morgan
1974
La Mandarine as Alain
1972
The Friends as Nicolas
1971
The Witness as Thomas
1969
The Tender Age as Henri Adolphe
1968
Jean-Claude Dauphin hasn't worked on any movies or TV shows