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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.

The Life of Mirrors

It's Not Me
as (archive footage)

Godard by Godard
as Self (archive footage)

Il était une fois Champs-Élysées
as Self (archive footage)

Romy, A Free Woman
as archive footage

La TV des 70's : Quand Giscard était président
as Self (archive footage)

Marx Can Wait
as Agostino (archive footage) (uncredited)

François Mitterrand & Anne Pingeot: Pieces of a Love Story
as Self (archive footage)

Claude Chabrol, the Maverick
as Self - Actor (archive footage)
Dios de monoambiente
as Self (archive footage)

Coming Apart
as (archive footage)

Claude Sautet, Romy, Yves, Michel et les autres
as Self (archive footage)

The Incredible Mr. Piccoli
as Self - Actor (archive footage)

Marco Ferreri: Dangerous But Necessary
as Self (archive footage)

Our Lady of Hormones
as Narrator

The Taste of Blueberries
as Michel

Lines of Wellington
as Leópold Scheitzer

You Ain't Seen Nothin' Yet
as Le père

Holy Motors
as Man with the Wine Stain

The Bardot mystery

Agnès Varda: From Here to There
as Self

Agnès Varda: From Here to There
as Self

Il était une fois... Vincent, François, Paul et les autres
as Self

We Have a Pope
as Melville

Portrait Of My Father
as Self

Le Bel Âge
as Maurice Reverdy

Brigitte Bardot: The Icon of France

Once Upon a Time… Contempt
as Self

The Beaches of Agnès
as Self (archive footage)

The Dust of Time
as Spyros

On War
as Le grand Hou

To Each His Own Cinema
as Nikita Kruschev (segment "Rencontre unique")
Le Roi Lear
as Le roi Lear

Beneath the Rooftops of Paris
as Marcel

Boxes
as Daddy

The Duchess of Langeais
as Vidame de Pamiers

Belle Toujours
as Henri Husson

Gardens in Autumn
as Marie, la mère de Vincent

Magic Mirror
as Prof. Heschel

Otar Iosseliani, le merle siffleur
as Himself

Everything's Connected
as Narrator

Un divertissement et Michel Piccoli
as Self

Raining Cats and Frogs
as Ferdinand (voice)

Little Lili
as acteur qui joue Simon

That Day
as Harald

A Man, a Real One
as Michel Piccoli

Romy Schneider, étrange étrangère
as Self
Il bambino di Betlemme

I’m Going Home
as Gilbert Valence

Everything's Fine, We're Leaving
as Louis

Speaking of Buñuel
as Self

Actors
as Michel Piccoli

Kiarostami in Close up
as as Self

París-Tombuctú
as Michel des Assantes

Libero Burro
as Zio Tony

The Happiest Place on Earth
as Récitant (voice)

Nothing About Robert
as Lord Ariel Chatwick-West

Vivement dimanche
as Self

Les paradoxes de Buñuel
as Self

Passion in the Desert
as Jean-Michel Venture de Paradis