
Paris, France
Henri Jacques Daniel Paul François (16 May 1920 – 25 November 2003), known as Jacques François was a French actor. During a sixty-year career (1942–2002) he appeared in more than 120 films and over 30 stage productions. During World War II, he served as a captain in the French First Army under General de Lattre. In 1948 he went to Hollywood with a view to playing the lead in Letter from an Unknown Woman (Max Ophüls, 1948) but the part went to Louis Jourdan. After appearing alongside Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers as the playwright Jacques Pierre Barredout in The Barkleys of Broadway (1949) he returned to France. François regularly dubbed Gregory Peck into French. Source: Article "Jacques François" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA.

as Self

as Self
1982

as Self
1987

as Self
1990

as Pascal
1973

as Lefevre
1977

as Félix, le maître d'hôtel
1988

as Le colonel de gendarmerie
1979

as Le colonel
1982

as General
1973

as Maurice
1998

as Jacques Loriol
1982

as 2nd client
1996
as Self
2003

as Self (archive footage)
2013

as M. de la Touche
2004

as Self
2003

as Ambassador
2001

as Cambefort
2000

as Jacques François
2000

as Maurice
1998

as 2nd client
1996

as Colonel Henry Johnson
1996

as Jeannot
1995

as Malcolm Smith
1993

as Gilbert Thonon
1992

as Theodore
1992

as Bergaux Latour
1992

as Le Comte Emile
1991

as Louis
1991

as Robinson (Voice)
1991

as M. Challes
1991

as Le Général Masse, supérieur hiérarchique du Squale
1991

as M. Thuiliet
1989

as Marshal Bassounov
1986

as Charles Schneider
1986

as Necker
1985

as Notaire
1984
as Self
1 ep.