Suzanne Flon

Suzanne Flon

actress

Suzanne Flon was born on Jan 28, 1918 in France. Suzanne Flon's big-screen debut came with Le colonel Chabert directed by René Le Hénaff in 1943. Suzanne Flon is known for Joyeux Noel directed by Christian Carion, Diane Kruger stars as Anna Sörensen and Natalie Dessay as Anna Sörensen. The most recent award Suzanne Flon achieved is César Awards, France. The upcoming new movie Suzanne Flon plays is Orchestra Seats which will be released on Apr 27, 2007.

Opulent French actress Suzanne Flon, who came from humble beginnings, evolved into a luminous stage and film star whose career lasted five decades. She was born near Paris, the daughter of a railway worker and a seamstress and at school developed an interest in writing poetry. Following high school she worked as an English interpreter at Au Printemps, a large Parisian department store, before finding a position with the famed songbird Édith Piaf as her personal secretary. Ms. Flon's first performance was as a mistress of ceremonies in a musical revue. She continued on stage and eventually developed an association with the noted playwright Jean Anouilh in the early 1940s; she played his heroine Ismene in "Antigone" and played Joan of Arc to great acclaim in "The Lark" in 1953. She also dabbled in avant garde works by Marguerite Duras as well as Shakespeare, Pirandello, Chekhov and Molliere and won a number of stage awards for her efforts. In 1959, she became a member of the Theatre National Populaire and appeared in several plays under the direction of René Clair.Ms. Flon began in films with Capitaine Blomet (1947) before branching out internationally in the 1950s. She was an elegant standout as a free-spirited couture model who became the object of fascination and desire for the crippled painter Toulouse-Lautrec played by José Ferrer in John Huston's film Moulin Rouge (1952). She also impressed in friend Orson Welles' comedy-thriller Monsieur Arkadin - Dossier secret (1955) as a listless patrician, and later played Miss Pittl for him in Le procès (1962) [The Trial]. War themes were prominent in her 1960s work. In Tu ne tueras point (1961) [Thou Shalt Not Kill], she won the Venice Film Festival award for her resolute mother whose son resists the World War I draft. In Le Train (1964) starring Burt Lancaster, Jeanne Moreau and Paul Scofield she had some excellent scenes as an art curator who becomes a detrimental figure in the Nazi's plans to secretly export masterpieces out of France during the French Resistance.Awards continued to come her way with a number of stylish and sensitive "grande dame" roles. She won bookend César awards for L'été meurtrier (1983) [One Deadly Summer] as Isabelle Adjani's deaf but highly sensitized aunt, and as the mother of Lambert Wilson in La vouivre (1989) [The Dragon]. Her rich and soothing voice was also used frequently for French narratives in numerous documentaries. Ms. Flon continued to appear on stage, film and TV right up until her death of a stomach ailment at age 87 in 2005.

  • Birthday

    Jan 28, 1918
  • Place of Birth

    Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, Seine [now Val-de-Marne], France

Known For

Awards

5 wins & 0 nominations

César Awards, France
1990
Best Supporting Actress (Meilleure actrice dans un second rôle)
Winner - César
La vouivre (1989)
1984
Best Supporting Actress (Meilleure actrice dans un second rôle)
Winner - César
7 d'Or Night
1985
Best Actress (Meilleure Comédienne)
Winner - 7 d'Or
Mademoiselle Clarisse (1984)
Show more

Movies & TV Shows

All
Movies
TV Shows