All Movies List
It's the Paris Life

as Comte Gontran de Barfleur

1954
Carnival

as Dr. Caberlot

1953
Virgile

as Le président

1953
Les Petites Cardinal

as Horace Cardinal

1951
Miquette

as Le marquis

1950
Scandals of Clochemerle

as Alexandre Bourdillat

1950
Girl from Maxim's

as Le général Petypon du Grêlé

1950
Si jeunesse savait...

as Abdul

1948
A Friend Will Come Tonight

as Philippe Prunier

1946
The White Blackbird

as Jules Leroy

1944
Marie-Martine

as l'oncle Parpain

1943
White Wings

as

1943
Le Soleil de minuit

as Ireniev

1943
Fantastic Night

as Thalès

1942
Ne bougez plus !

as Andromaque de Miremir

1941
The French Way

as Monsieur Dalban

1940
Coral Reefs

as Hobson

1939
Pasha's Wives

as Djemal Pacha

1939
The Woman Thief

as Academician

1938
Beautiful Star

as Lemarchal

1938
Pépé le Moko

as Le Grand Père

1937
Ignace

as Le baron Gédéon des Orfrais

1937
Désiré

as Adrien

1937
Saturnin Fabre Saturnin Fabre

Birthday

1884-04-04

Place of Birth

Sens, Yonne, France

Biography

Saturnin Fabre, born April 4, 1884 in Sens (Yonne) and died October 24, 1961 in Montgeron (Essonne), is a French actor. His paternal family was from the south of France (Var and Bouches-du-Rhône). He lived in Deuil-la-Barre. He won a first prize at the Conservatoire and played dramas, boulevard comedies and operettas as well, setting himself up as the "thundering", out of phase phrasing, of French cinema. He approaches the silent cinema since 1911 with Albert Capellani to whom we owe since 1909 the first French feature film: L'Assommoir. In 1929, he switched to talking with The Road is Beautiful Robert Florey. Known for his strong personality, he is one of the most singular supporting roles of pre-war and post-war French cinema, in the tradition of Jean Tissier and Julien Carette. He occupies the screen with such a presence that he often forget the many turnips in which he participates. He is particularly remembered for his tremendous choppy voice and perfect diction. In the film Marie-Martine Albert Valentin, he addresses to Bernard Blier, who plays his nephew, his most famous replica: "Hold your candle right! ". It is said that at the third resumption of the repartee, it is the public who answered. He has played in almost 79 talking films, mostly comedies, under the direction of 57 different directors (mostly prestigious). In 1948, he signs, from the anagram Ninrutas Erbaf, perfectly wacky memories, under the title Scottish Shower. He was also a very good clarinetist, and the author of several songs and sketches he performed on stage early in his career. For the actress Danièle Delorme, "Saturnin Fabre was a hallucinated comedian". Still according to her, "It was a baroque actor, certainly, there was a grain of madness in him. But he was furiously intelligent, with great lucidity ... He embodied excess. " Saturnin Fabre died in 1961 in his property in Montgeron, overwhelmed by pulmonary edema. He is buried in the Carrières-sous-Poissy cemetery in the Yvelines. He never consoled himself for the death of his wife, Suzanne Marie Benoist, in 1957 with whom he was married on November 26, 1925 in Paris XVIII. The Cannes Film Festival paid him a late tribute, and posthumously, in 1962. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Description above from the Wikipedia article Saturnin Fabre, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
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