Search movies and TV series
Acting
Jean Raoul Robert Rochefort (29 April 1930 – 9 October 2017) was a French actor. He received many accolades during his career, including an Honorary César in 1999. Rochefort was born on 29 April 1930 in Paris, France, to Breton parents. Jean Rochefort was not born in Dinan, but his parents were living there. He was educated at the Lycée Pierre Corneille in Rouen. Rochefort was nineteen years old when he entered the Centre d'Art Dramatique de la rue Blanche. Later he joined the Conservatoire National. After completing his national service in 1953, he worked with the Compagnie Grenier Hussenot as a theatre actor for seven years. There he was noted for his ability to play both drama and comedy. He then became a television and cinema actor, and also worked as director. After some supporting roles in Cartouche, Captain Fracasse and in Marvelous Angelique, Rochefort played his first big role with Annie Girardot as his wife and Claude Jade as his daughter in Hearth Fires in 1972. In this drama, he starred as a man who leaves his family for ten years before returning. In this film he played at 41 years old a father of adult children (the young Claude Jade was already 23). To appear older, he grew a moustache, his trademark, which he later removed only once, in 1996 for Ridicule. Four years after Hearth Fires he was the leading star of the midlife crisis comedy Pardon Mon Affaire as a man who risks his married life with Danièle Delorme for an affair with Anny Duperey. Thanks to the success of this film, Rochefort became very popular. In 1972, he starred opposite Pierre Richard as Chief of Counter-Espionage, Louis Toulouse, in the Yves Robert comedy Le Grand Blond avec une chaussure noire, a role he reprised in the 1974 sequel Le Retour du grand blond, also directed by Robert. In 1998, he starred as "Fernand de Morcerf" opposite Gerard Depardieu in the mini-series Le Comte de Monte Cristo. In the eighties, he became the narrator of the French version of Welcome to Pooh Corner, replacing Laurie Main. This made him popular with children at the time and Disney hired him to record several audio versions of their classic movies. In the 1990s, he returned to comedy with Les Grands Ducs where he played alongside two other actors of his generation with a similar career, Philippe Noiret and Jean-Pierre Marielle. He was set to play the lead role in The Man Who Killed Don Quixote, after being found as "the perfect Quixote" by director Terry Gilliam. Rochefort learned to speak English just for the part. Unfortunately, amongst other production problems, he began suffering from a herniated disc. Unable to film for months, production was cancelled. A documentary, Lost in La Mancha, was made about the failed production. In 1960, he married Alexandra Moscwa, with whom he had two children: Marie (1962) and Julien (1965). With actress-filmmaker Nicole Garcia, he also had a son Pierre. Through his second marriage with Françoise Vidal, he had two children, Louise (1990) and Clémence (1992). ... Description above from the Wikipedia article Jean Rochefort, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Exception culturelle, la bataille qui a sauvé le cinéma français
as Self (archive) - actor

L'Œuvre invisible
as Self

Belmondo: The Incorrigible

Rochefort, Marielle, Noiret: Les copains d'abord
as Self (archive footage)

Archives secrètes
as Self (archive footage)

Jean Rochefort, l'irrésistible
as Self (archive footage)

Je ne sais pas si c'est tout le monde
as Self

Belmondo ou le goût du risque
as Self

Belmondo, le magnifique
as Self (archive footage)

À la recherche de... Pierre Richard
as Self - Actor (archive footage)

Belmondo by Belmondo
as Self
Les Boloss des belles lettres
as Self - Narrator

Les Rats
as Narrator (voice)

April and the Extraordinary World
as Pops (voice)

Florida
as Claude Lherminier

Jack and the Cuckoo-Clock Heart
as Méliès (voice)

Jappeloup
as Self (uncredited)

... à la française !
as Minister of Foreign Affairs

Asterix & Obelix: God Save Britannia
as Lucius Fouinus

The Artist and the Model
as Marc Cros

Square
as Self

Belmondo, il était une fois le beau monde
as Self (archive footage)

Belmondo, itinéraire...
as Self

Titeuf
as Pépé (voice)

The Great Restaurant
as Un client du restaurant

Agathe Cléry
as Louis Guinard

Bien des choses
as Sultan the dog (voice)

I Always Wanted to Be a Gangster
as Jean

The Key
as Joseph Arp
Tell No One: The B-Side
as Self

Mr. Bean's Holiday
as Maître d'hôtel

Chez Maupassant
as le père

Twice Upon a Time
as Louis Ruinard

Tell No One
as Gilbert Neuville

On n'est pas couché
as Self - Guest

Hell
as Louis

Akoibon
as Chris Barnes

Lucky Luke and the Daltons
as Jolly Jumper (voice)

Les bottes
as Récitant (voice)

RRRrrrr!!!
as Lucie

Heureux ?
as The interpreter of Fernand Raynaud's sketches

Saint-Germain ou La négociation
as Henri de Malassise

The Car Keys
as Actor who refuses to film with Laurent

J.S. Bach: The Music, The Life, The Legend
as Narrator (voice)

Pierre et le Loup
as Narrator (voice)

Man on the Train
as Monsieur Manesquier

Blanche
as Mazarin

Lost in La Mancha
as Self

Honolulu Baby
as Cri Cri

The Closet
as Kopel, le directeur de l'usine

Delphine Seyrig, portrait d'une comète
as Self

Speaking of Buñuel
as Self

Rembrandt
as Nicolaes Tulp

Wind with the Gone
as Edgard Wexley

Vivement dimanche
as Self

The Count of Monte Cristo
as Fernand Mondego

Le serpent a mangé la grenouille
as Monsieur Moreau

Barracuda
as Monsieur Clément

Never Ever
as Gerard Panier

Clara et son juge
as Judge Larcher