Stand by · pulling the latest frames
Stand by · pulling the latest frames

Jean Martin (6 March 1922 - 2 February 2009) was a French actor. Coming from a Berry family, he spent part of his childhood in Biarritz, where his father worked for a furrier. During the Second World War, he hid to escape the Forced Labor Service. Staying in Paris, he appeared in two films by Maurice Tourneur: "The Devil's Hand" (1942) then "Cécile Est Mort" (1943). At the twilight of the forties, he started doing theater. In 1953, Jean Martin gained notoriety by playing the new play by Irish playwright Samuel Beckett, "Waiting for Godot", under the direction of Roger Blin, becoming the first to take on the role of Lucky. The same Roger Blin produced “End of the Game” (1957), by the same Beckett, a few years later, and entrusted the same Jean Martin with the role of Clov. In 1960, Jean Martin staged his first play, “Letter Dead”, by Robert Pinget. In 1962, he again staged a play, “The Representatives”, by Aglaé and Mona Mitropoulos, adapted by Michel Arnaud. Alongside this theatrical career which would prove to be rich, Jean Martin returned to cinema: “Notre-Dame de Paris” (1956), by Jean Delannoy, “Paris belongs to us” (1958), by Jacques Rivette, “Ballade for a thug " (1962), by Jean-Claude Bonnardot, "La foire aux dunces" (1963), by Louis Daquin and "À toi de fait mignon" (1963), by Bernard Borderie.
7.5The Day of the Jackal
1973
7.9The Battle of Algiers
1966
7.3My Name Is Nobody
1973
5.2The Beguines
1972
6.5The Associate
1979
7.2The Night Caller
1975
6.3A Genius, Two Friends, and an Idiot
1975
7.2The Wing or the Thigh?
1976
7.8The King and the Mockingbird
1980
5.6L'Homme en colère
1979
5.4Manon 70
1968
6.4The Inheritor
1973
6.0I'm Losing My Temper
1974
6.4Lucie Aubrac
1997
6.2Successive Slidings of Pleasure
1974
7.1The Nun
1967
6.5Je T'Aime, Je T'Aime
1968
6.5Cecile Is Dead
1944
6.3Inspector Blunder
1980
6.0The Cat
1977