Betty Daussmond

French actress
Betty Daussmond
Daussmond by Nadar, 1902 or earlier
Born
Marguerite Anne Bettina Doneau

29 July 1873
Sarthe, Pays-de-Loire, France
Died25 September 1957 (aged 84)
Paris, Ile-de-France, France
OccupationActress
Years active1910-1953 (film)

Betty Daussmond (1873–1957), born Marguerite Anne Bettina Doneau, was a French stage and film actress.[1]

In 1914 she played the leading female part in Georges Feydeau's last full-length farce, Je ne trompe pas mon mari!. The author commented that she brought "joie de vivre" to the role on "her pretty Columbine lips".[2]

Selected filmography

  • All for Love (1933)
  • A Weak Woman (1933)
  • Poliche (1934)
  • Three Sailors (1934)
  • The New Testament (1936)
  • Woman of Malacca (1937)
  • Cocoanut (1939)
  • White Paws (1949)
  • Three Women (1952)
  • A Woman's Treasure (1953)

References

  1. ^ Wearing p. 175
  2. ^ Gidel, p. 240

Bibliography

  • Gidel, Henry (1991). Georges Feydeau (in French). Paris: Flammarion. ISBN 978-2-08-066280-4.
  • Wearing, J. P. The London Stage 1920-1929: A Calendar of Productions, Performers, and Personnel. Rowman & Littlefield, 2014.

External links

  • Betty Daussmond at IMDb
  • Michel Bouquet and Betty Daussmond in "L'Invitation au Chateau". Paris, theater of Atelier, November 1947; photograph at Getty Images.
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