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Noël-Noël

Director | Actor | Writer
Date of birth : 08/08/1897
Date of death : 10/04/1989
City of birth : Paris, France

A beloved, warmly popular French character player and screenwriter in his heyday, Noël Noël was born Lucien Édouard Noël on August 9, 1897 in Paris. He initially developed his celebrity in music halls and the cabaret venue, where he created his Adémaï Joseph comic character, a blundering, oafish French soldier. He eventually took this character successfully to film in the early 30s and remained in movies as both actor and sometime writer and director in both his own vehicles and those of others top comedians. A leftist cartoonist at one time not to mention a skillful songwriter, many of his ideals seeped into his work. Noël Noël began immediately in starring roles with the comedy La prison en folie (1931) (Prison Madness); as a buffoonish lover in the more dramatic Mistigri (1931) opposite Madeleine Renaud; as a fiancé torn between two women in the comedy Father Unawares (1932); as the title comic role in Monsieur Albert (1932); and as a snubbed lover in [the social comedy Mam'zelle Spahi (1934). He took his popular protagonist, the naive, unassuming, bewildered-looking Adémaï soldier, to cinematic life first in the short films Adémaï et la nation armée (1932) and Backbench (2014), then to feature films with Adémaï aviateur (1934) co-starring Fernandel, Passing Glory (1999) co-starring Michel Simon and the war time picture Adémaï bandit d'honneur (1943). Noël Noël became just as popular during the WWII years starring in such escapist film vehicles as La famille Duraton (1939), Sur le plancher des vaches (1939) and A Cage of Nightingales (1945). He continued sporadically as a character lead or support in the 1950's and 1960's with such delights as the musical comedy Life in a Song (1951), which he also wrote and directed; Run Away Mr. Perle (1952), in the title role; the Preston Sturges comedy The French, They Are a Funny Race (1955); the political comedy The Terror with Women (1956); The Gangsters (1957); the mystery comedy Seventh Heaven (1958) with Danielle Darrieux; the comic farce Sputnik (1958); The Bureaucrats (1959); Les vieux de la vieille (1960); and the sex comedy Jessica (1962) starring Maurice Chevalier and Angie Dickinson. He left films after starring in the farcical comedy The Sleeping Sentinel (1966), which he also wrote, in which he portrays a doctor who conspires with the royalists against Napoleon. Married twice, he died in France on October 4, 1989, age 92. .

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