Known For Actor
Gender Female
Birthday 1891-04-17
Deathday 1974-03-28 (82 years old)
Place of Birth Paris, France
Also Known As Francoise Rosay, Françoise Bandy de Nalèche, Frances Rosay
Françoise Rosay born Françoise Bandy de Nalèche, (19 April 1891 – 28 March 1974) was a French opera singer, diseuse, and actress who enjoyed a film career of over sixty years and who became a legendary figure in French cinema. She went on to appear in over 100 movies in her career. Rosay was born Françoise Bandy de Nalèche in Paris, the illegitimate daughter of Marie-Thérèse Chauvin, an actress known as Sylviac. She originally planned to become an opera singer, and in 1917, won a prize at the Paris Conservatoire and made her debut at the Palais Garnier in the title role of Salammbô by Ernest Reyer. She also sang in Castor et Pollux by Rameau and Thaïs by Massenet. Her first recorded film was Falstaff in 1911, and she began to work in Hollywood from 1929 onwards. In 1917, she married the director Jacques Feyder, with whom she remained until his death in 1948, having three sons. She appeared in several films under her husband's direction, including Le Grand Jeu (1933), Pension Mimosas (1934), La Kermesse héroïque (Carnival in Flanders) (1935) and Les Gens du voyage (1937). Rosay spent the duration of World War II in England and Switzerland, where she taught acting classes at the Conservatoire de Genève. She still appeared in films during this time, notably the British Halfway House (1944) as the refugee French wife of a British sea captain. During her career, she appeared with all the great stars of French cinema, including Jean Gabin, Michèle Morgan, Raimu, Jeanne Moreau, Danielle Darrieux, Micheline Presle, Paul Meurisse, Gérard Philipe, Louis Jouvet, Michel Simon, Simone Signoret, Fernandel and Jean-Louis Barrault. In Hollywood, she co-starred with Charles Boyer, Maurice Chevalier and Buster Keaton and worked with directors such as William Dieterle (September Affair, 1949), Martin Ritt (The Sound and the Fury, 1958), Ronald Neame (The Seventh Sin, 1956) and Peter Glenville (Me and the Colonel, 1957) with Danny Kaye. In England she appeared in The Alien Corn, a segment of the W. Somerset Maugham anthology film Quartet. A highly accomplished pianist herself in real life, she played the role of a famous piano virtuoso who gives aspiring pianist Dirk Bogarde a compassionate but honest and devastating critical appraisal of his likelihood of becoming a great musician – which results in his suicide. She performs in the film Schubert's Impromptu in E flat. In 1950 she appeared on stage at London's Winter Garden Theatre, playing the title role in 'Madame Tic Tac' but it had only a short run. It was not until 1938 that her biological father, Count François Louis Bandy de Nalèche, acknowledged her as his daughter. Her final appearance on film was in the Maximilian Schell-directed Academy Award-nominated and Golden Globe-winner for Best Foreign-Language Foreign Film of 1974, Der Fußgänger (English title: The Pedestrian). She died in Montgeron, Île-de-France, near Paris. Her grave is located in Sorel-Moussel, Île-de-France, where she is buried with her husband, movie director Jacques Feyder. There are streets named after Françoise Rosay in Limoges, Montpellier, Chevry-Cossigny, Launaguet and Martigues. Source: Article "Françoise Rosay" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
as Frau Dechamps
as Mrs. Morelli-Johnson
as Madame Dubreuil
as Self
as Louise de Kerfuntel
as Léontine Palpicart aka 'La Gâteuse'
as Mme Nagy (uncredited)
as Mme Aubry
as Gertrude, une "prêteuse" du milieu
as Lili's Grandmother
as Borgia
as Mrs. Webley
as Madame Pauline
as Madame Prade
as Leonora Guala
as Madame Parisot
as La grand-mère de Marguerite
as Mrs. Montcatel mother
as Berthe
as Caroline Compson
as Aunt Antonia
as Madame Bouffier
as Vincenzino's mother
as Comtesse Reinhart
as Mother Superior
as padrona della pensione
as Bernardine
as Catherine de Médicis / Catharine of Medici
as Self
as Lady of Sant'Agata
as La contessa Lamieri
as Anna Steiner
as Gabrielle Demeuse
as Elisabeth de Pallières, the mother (segment "Pride")
as La contessa Canali
as Marie Martin
as Noemi, die Amme
as Mrs. Gauthier
as Laura Chapdelaine
as Maria Salvatini
as Mme Monnier
as The Countess
as Élisabeth
as Mireille Dombreval
as Lea Makart
as The Electress Sophia
as Countess Brévannes
as Mme Rose, la tenancière de l'hôtel
as Lanec Florrie
as Alice Meadows
as Fanny Helder
as La duchesse de Vimeuse
as Madame Devarenne
as Madame Flora
as Catherine II
as Francoise Scheffer
as Régina Berry
as Flora
as Dolorès Detcharry
as Margaret Molyneux
as Marguerite Audié
as Sylvie - seine Mutter
as The fortune teller
as Gilberte Boulanger
as Jenny Gauthier
as Mrs. Jouvenel
as Cornelia
as Madame Burgomaster
as Mme de Quersac
as Mrs. Duchemin
as Madame Gardane
as Louise Noblet
as The Russian Countess
as Clara
as Silvia
as Sylvia
as Blanche
as The Princess Mother
as La comtesse de Laverdens
as Mrs. Bossu
as Mrs. Delannoy
as Princess Marie
as Madame Jacquet
as Madame Husson
as Mme Mougeot
as The widow
as Blanche Brissac
as Rosatti
as Rosa Duchêne
as Madame Boucijon
as Mademoiselle Edwige
as The Queen
as Princess Plata d'Ettingen
as Zuleide, Alizar's Mother
as The aunt
as Madame de Staël
as Madame d'Arcy, his wife
as Edith Maranet
as Shoe Store Customer
as Assistant Director
as Writer