• Name: Gérard Depardieu
  • Date of Birth: December 27, 1948
  • Place of Birth: Châteauroux, Indre, France
Mini-bio: Despite his unorthodox visage, Gérard Depardieu has made a profound mark on the acting world, earning a recognition as one of Europe's most accomplished performers and appealing leading men. Perhaps a... read more contributor to his consistently intense performances, Depardieu's childhood was one of extreme poverty. At twelve years old, he dropped out of school and hitchhiked across Europe on an informal tour funded primarily by the profits of stolen cars and assorted black-market products. Depardieu would likely have continued in his juvenile delinquency were it not for a friend who was attending drama school in Paris. Intrigued, Depardieu enrolled at the Theatre National Populaire, where he studied his trade alongside future co-stars Patrick Dewaere and Miou-Miou. In 1965, the young actor made his debut in a French short film by the name of Le Beatnik et le Minet, and began making regular appearances on French television shows. By the mid-'70s, Depardieu had co-starred in 11 French films, though he wouldn't enjoy widespread success until his role of a nihilistic but lovable petty criminal in director Bertrand Blier's Going Places (1974). Not long afterward, Depardieu could be found holding his own against acclaimed French actress Isabelle Adjani in Barocco and portraying a passionate Communist organizer in 1900 (both 1976). In 1978, Depardieu re-teamed with Blier for the Oscar-winning Get Out Your Handkerchiefs, and he went on to win France's prestigious César award for his performance as a resistance fighter in The Last Metro (1980). After his portrayal of a 16th century peasant in The Return of Martin Guerre (1982), Depardieu played the title role in Danton, and he stepped behind the camera as co-director for 1984's Le Tartuffe.The 1990s were equally successful for Depardieu, particularly in the case of director Jean-Paul Rappeneau's 1990 version of Cyrano de Bergerac, for which Depardieu earned an Oscar nomination. He made his foray into American film in 1990's Green Card opposite Andie MacDowell . Though the bulk of his success still stemmed from French films (All the Mornings of the World [1991], Germinal [1993], A Pure Formality [1994], and Colonel Chabert [1994], to name a few) Depardieu nonetheless achieved moderate recognition in the American film market. Despite the failures of Ridley Scott's 1492: Conquest of Paradise (1992) and Steve Miner's English remake of My Father the Hero, Depardieu was praised for his performances in Kenneth Branagh's Hamlet (1996), Nick Cassavetes' She's So Lovely (1997), and Randall Wallace's The Man in the Iron Mask (1998), with Gabriel Byrne, John Malkovich, Jeremy Irons, and Leonardo DiCaprio.Over the following years, Depardieu maintained his prowess in film. In addition to critically acclaimed performances in The Closet (2001), CQ (2001), City of Ghosts (2002), and Nathalie... (2003), Depardieu began work with internationally recognized French director Alain Chabat for RRRrrr! in 2004. Additional appearances throughout 2005 and 2006 included the title role in Boudu (2005), Alain in Quand j'étais chanteur (2006), and Chef Didier in Last Holiday. Depardieu made his directorial debut with 2000's The Bridge.Depardieu has become somewhat notorious for his stormy offscreen life. He made a concerted effort to cut back on his alcohol consumption following a heart attack and an emergency quintuple bypass operation, in 2000. In 2003, he officially cut off contact with his son, Guillaume Depardieu when the young man threatened him with a gun and received a suspended prison sentence. On another note, the elder Depardieu was involved in both a plane collision and two motorcycle accidents as well (in 1998 and 2003), and officials attributed at least one of the incidents to abnormally high alcohol levels in the actor's bloodstream. In 2005, Depardieu allegedly scandalized European viewers when he crassly (and drunkenly) insulted a fellow guest on a French talk show for comments that the woman made about the cookbook he had authored. The aforementioned cookbook was no one-hit wonder for Depardieu. A highly-regarded gourmand and gifted enologist, he opened the Parisian restaurant La Fontaine Gaillon, on the second arrondissement, along with Buffet froid co-star Carole Bouquet in fall 2003. In October 2005, Depardieu publicly announced his intention to retire from screen acting, following his starring role in Michou d'Auber (2007). ~ Tracie Cooper, Rovi
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The relationship between an actor and a director is like a love story between a man and woman. I`m sure sometimes I`m the woman
~ Gèrard Depardieu ~




Gerard DepardieuDepardieu’s impoverished beginnings may have been a contributing factor to his later success. Born the third of six children in Chateauroux, 106 miles south of Paris, to a disillusioned mother and a father who was an illiterate sheet metal worker and alcoholic, Depardieu dropped out of school and ran away from home at the age of 12. Hitchhiking around Europe, he earned money as a door-to-door soap salesman and as a beach boy in the South of France, as well as getting involved in car theft and the black market.

After several brushes with the law and a brief spell in prison, things took a turn for the better when a friend encouraged the young Gerard to audition for the Theatre Nationale Populaire in Paris. Once he had overcome a stammer, Depardieu excelled, training alongside future co-stars Patrick Dewaere and Miou-Miou. In 1965 he made his film debut in the ‘Le Beatnik et le minet’, after which he quickly became a familiar face on French TV.
By the early 70s, Depardieu had co-starred in 11 French films, but his big break was to come in 1974, when he was given the part of an incompetent thug in director Bertrand Blier’s Les Valseuses’/‘Going Places’. After this success, he went on to star alongside popular French actress Isabelle Adjani in ‘Barocco’, followed by the role of a passionate Communist agitator in ‘1900’, before teaming up with Blier once again in the Oscar-winning ‘Preparez vos mouchoirs’/‘Get Out Your Handkerchiefs’.

Starting the 80s with a bang, Depardieu won France’s prestigious César award for his portrayal of a resistance fighter in ‘Le Dernier métro’/‘The Last Metro’. More rave reviews followed when he played the part of a 16-century peasant whose identity is in question in ‘Le Retour de Martin Guerre’/‘The Return of Martin Guerre’ in 1982. The same year saw him shine in the title role of ‘Danton’, set in the aftermath of the French Revolution.

Depardieu made the switch from actor to co-director in 1984, with ‘Le Tartuffe’. A stellar performance as a tough cop in ‘Police’ came next, snaring him the Best Male Performance award at the 1985 Venice Film Festival, before he landed the career-changing role of a naïve farmer in the classic ‘Jean de Florette’. Suddenly, the name Gerard Depardieu was recognised around the world.

The actor sealed the approval of fans and critics alike in the title role of ‘Cyrano de Bergerac’, a box-office smash in 1990, for which he won a Best Actor Oscar nomination. The film, which scooped nine Césars, including Depardieu’s Best Actor, and a Golden Globe for Best Foreign Film, also earned him the 1990 Cannes Film Festival Award for Best Male Performan


Making the move into English-language acting, Depardieu starred alongside Andie MacDowell in the 1990 romantic comedy ‘Green Card’, playing a French musician who agrees to a marriage of convenience. The following year he shared the role of 17th-century composer Marin Marais with his son Guillaume in the biopic ‘Tous les matins du monde’/‘All The Mornings of the World’. Throughout the rest of the Nineties, Depardieu remained in high demand. Despite the limited success of an English remake of the 1991 hit ‘Mon Père, ce heros’, as ‘My Father, The Hero’, and being miscast as Christopher Columbus in ‘1492: Conquest of Paradise’, performances in the epic ‘Germinal’, in Claude Berri’s ‘Colonel Chabert’, in ‘Les Misérables’, ‘Balzac’ and a TV adaptation of ‘The Count of Monte Cristo’, to name but a few, kept his legion of fans happy.

Another directing credit came in 1999, with the semi-autobiographical ‘Un Pont entre deux rives’/‘The Bridge’, and in the same year Depardieu took on the role of Obelix in the live-action remake of the comic books ‘Asterix et Obelix contre Cesar’. This was followed, a year later, with a light-hearted portrayal of a flamboyant designer in the family film ‘102 Dalmatians’.
Having survived two near-fatal accidents (a plane collision in 1996 and a motorbike accident in 1998) and major heart surgery in July 2000, Depardieu went from strength to strength in the first few years of the new millennium, appearing in, among others, ‘Love, Prozac and Other Curiosities’, Roman Coppola’s ‘CQ’, ‘Between Strangers’, in which he acted opposite Sophia Loren, the Matt Dillon-directed ‘City of God’, ‘Bon Voyage’, and ‘Tais-Toi’/‘Shut Up’.
Depardieu is divorced from Elisabeth Guignot, who he appeared alongside in ‘Jean de Florette’ and who is the mother of his two grown-up children, Julie and Guillaume. He also has a daughter, Roxanne, reportedly born to model Karine Sylla. The actor has a famously rocky relationship with his son, officially cutting off contact with him in 2003 after Guillame threatened him with a gun, which led to a suspended jail sentence. Depardieu has had a long-standing relationship with the actress Carole Bouqet, with whom he opened the Parisian restaurant La Fontaine Gaillon in 2003.


As well as two restaurants, the actor maintains an eclectic mix of business interests, including a vineyard in the Loire, Romanian textiles businesses and Cuban oil wells. He has also written a cookbook and ventured into international politics. In 2005, at the age of 56, Depardieu announced his intention to retire from screen acting following his starring role in ‘Michou d’Auber’, claiming that he had nothing left to prove. He has since gone back on this decision, maintaining his prolific output with roles in several feature films, some of them still currently in production.






Vital Stats

Full Name:Gérard Xavier Marcel Depardieu
Depardieu is a typical name from the center of France.
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Height: 5' 10" (1.80 m)
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flixster.actor.pane.162656948 - flixster
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Education
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At the age of 16, Depardieu left Châteauroux for Paris. There, he studied acting under Jean-Laurent Cochet, and went on to become one of France's most renowned actors.

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amily:

In 1970 Depardieu married Élisabeth Guignot with whom he had two children, actor Guillaume (1971–2008) and actress Julie (* 1973). In 1992, while separated from Élisabeth, he had a daughter, Roxane, with the model Karine Sylla. In 1996 he divorced Élisabeth and began a relationship with actress Carole Bouquet, with whom he was married from 1997 to 2005

2006, he had a son, Jean, with a Franco-Cambodian woman named Hélène, according to the 6 August 2008 issue of Paris Match. Since 2005, Depardieu has lived with a Harvard-educated novelist, Clementine Igou. On 13 October 2008, his son Guillaume died at the age of 37 from complications linked to a sudden case of pneumonia.
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