Christine Pascal

Christine Pascal (29 November 1953 – 30 August 1996) was a French actress, writer and director. Born in Lyon, Rhône, Pascal made her film debut at 21 in Michel Mitrani's Les Guichets du Louvre (1974), and began a working relationship with Bertrand Tavernier in her next film, L'Horloger de Saint-Paul (1974). Other films with Tavernier include Que la fête commence (1975), for which she received a César nomination for Best Supporting Actress; The Judge and the Assassin (1976); Des enfants gatés (1977), which she co-scripted; and Round Midnight. Other film appearances include Black Thursday (1974), La Meilleure façon de marcher (1976), The Maids of Wilko (1979), Entre Nous (1983), and Le Grand Chemin (1987). She made her directorial debut with Félicité, and also directed La Garce, Zanzibar, Le Petit prince a dit (which won the Louis Delluc Prize) and Adultère, mode d'emploi. Source: Article "Christine Pascal" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.

Known For

Birth Location Lyon, Rhône, France
Born 1953-11-29
Died 1996-08-30

Movies

See How They Fall as Sandrine
1994
Le Sourire as Chantal
1994
The Patriots as Laurence
1994
1991
Le Sixième Doigt as Viviane
1990
The Color of the Wind as Hélène Plazy
1988
Promised... sworn! as Madeleine
1987
The Grand Highway as Claire, Louis' mother
1987
'Round Midnight as Sylvie
1986
Sincerely Charlotte as Christine
1985
Hell Train as Isabelle
1985
Subterfuge as The Cineast
1983
Entre Nous as Sarah
1983
1979
1979
Félicité as Félicité
1979
We Forget Everything! as Anne Glizer
1979
Surprise Sock as Juliette
1978
Spoiled Children as Anne Torrini
1977
1976
1975
Black Thursday as Jeanne
1974
The Watchmaker of St. Paul as Liliane Torrini, companion of Bernard
1974

Movies

Zanzibar Writer
1989
Zanzibar Director
1989
The Bitch Screenplay
1984
The Bitch Director
1984
Félicité Director
1979
Félicité Writer
1979
Spoiled Children Screenplay
1977