Philippe Clévenot
Actor/Actriz
34
Películas
0
Series
Philippe Clévenot ranks among the greatest actors of a generation who, in the 1960s and 1970s, embarked on the adventure of collective creations and sought to reach a new, popular audience, following in the footsteps of Jean Vilar or Ariane Mnouchkine. From 1962 to 1965, he studied at the Centre dramatique de l’Est, then directed by Hubert Gignoux, Paul Lefèvre, and Claude Petitpierre. At the same time, he continued studying the organ, harpsichord, and piano. After two years of military service (1965–1967), during which he learned German, he joined the Maison de la Culture in Bourges, directed by Gabriel Monnet.
In 1971, he took part in the early days of the Théâtre de l’Espérance with Jean Jourdheuil and Jean‑Pierre Vincent, then in 1976 joined the school of the TNS (the higher school of dramatic arts in Strasbourg), also directed by Jean‑Pierre Vincent. From 1985 to 1987, he was a resident actor at the Comédie‑Française.
Philippe Clévenot performed both classical and contemporary repertoire. He appeared in The Misanthrope by Molière and Macbeth by Shakespeare (both directed by Jean‑Pierre Vincent); in The Prince of Homburg by Kleist (directed by Matthias Langhoff) and The Broken Jug by the same author (directed by Bernard Sobel); in The School for Wives by Molière (directed by Bernard Sobel); Rameau’s Nephew by Diderot (directed by Jean‑Marie Simon); in Artaud Mômo and The Vieux‑Colombier Lecture as well as The True Story of Artaud Mômo by Antonin Artaud, in which he portrayed the author; in The Sea Wall by Marguerite Duras; In the Jungle of Cities by Brecht (directed by Stéphane Braunschweig); The Life of the Egoist Fätzer, also by Brecht (directed by Bernard Sobel); Rumor on Wall Street by Bernard Chatellier, based on Melville’s Bartleby (directed by Bérangère Bonvoisin); and Pioneers in Ingolstadt by Marieluise Fleisser.
As a director, he notably staged Anna Christie by Eugene O’Neill in Geneva in 2000 — a production later revived at the Théâtre Gérard Philipe in Villeurbanne in 2001. He also wrote Celle qui ment, inspired by the famous Italian mystic Angela of Foligno.
His first film role was offered by René Allio in 1970 in Les Camisards. He later worked with numerous filmmakers, including Bertrand Blier, Patrice Leconte, and Jean‑Jacques Beineix. One of his final film appearances was in Disparus (1998), the first historical and political feature by young director Gilles Bourdos.
Como Actor/Actriz
Le Mari de la coiffeuse
Morvoisieux
Camille Claudel
Eugène Blot
Céline et Julie vont en bateau
Guilou
Merci la vie
Producer
Le Moine
Place Vendôme
Kleiser
Roselyne et les lions
Bracquard
Les Deux Fragonard
Father Rudolphe
Eaux profondes
Henri Valette
West Indies ou les Nègres marrons de la liberté
L'abbé
Blanche et Marie
Commissioner Benoist
France, société anonyme
Diesel
Amadeus
La Chanson du mal-aimé
Ecclesiastic
Las veredas de Saturno
Comisario
Je t'ai dans la peau
Lucien
Cocktail Molotov
Le diplomate
Mordbüro
KMB/Mr. Jean
Le Mariage à la mode
Don Juan
Les yeux des oiseaux
Enrique Materneo
Les camisards
'La Fleur'
Embrasse-moi
L'accordeur
La Sorcière
Le dominicain
Le coup suprême
Monsieur T'Champ
Swing troubadour
Alex Emmerich
La place d'un autre
Thomas' father
Eden miseria
Les Conquistadores
Office manager
L'Escapade
Paul
Elvire Jouvet 40
Louis Jouvet