
Paris, France
François Darbon is a French actor, director, and writer. In 1938, François Darbon began his first theatrical experiences in Tunis. With a company of amateur actors, he performed for three evenings at the municipal theatre. The following day, nostalgic for those nights on stage, he decided to make it his profession. In September 1939, during his military service near Biarritz, he met the man he would never leave, André Clavé, who, like him, had been mobilized as a Reserve Officer Cadet. Their friendship was born through discussions about theatre, and at a time when André Clavé had temporarily set aside the troupe he had founded in 1936, the company Les Comédiens de la Roulotte, with Geneviève Wronecki-Kellershohn, Jean Desailly—then a very young amateur beginner—and a few others. François Darbon would meet them again in September 1940 to perform La paix chez soi. The following month, the troupe joined the Jeune France movement, and they finally began a life as professional actors. They were joined in February 1941 by Jean Vilar, who agreed to come to La Roulotte “simply as a writer,” and by Hélène Gerber, both students of Charles Dullin. Thanks to financial support from Jeune France, the troupe went on a theatrical tour through central France during the summer of 1941. In the summer of 1942, La Roulotte set off again, touring Brittany and central France, but this time without subsidies, as Jeune France had been dissolved at the end of winter. For security reasons, Clavé was then forced to leave his own company a year after joining a Resistance network, the Brutus network. François Darbon used the final years of the war to study under Charles Dullin. After the war, he reunited with André Clavé. Having returned from the Nazi camps of Buchenwald and Dora, Clavé was asked in 1946 by Jeanne Laurent to reconstitute his troupe, Les Comédiens de la Roulotte, to conduct exploratory tours. She later asked him to replace Roland Piétri as director of the Centre Dramatique de l’Est in Colmar. Darbon took part in all these ventures until the end of December 1952, when Michel Saint-Denis replaced Clavé. Darbon and Clavé then founded the Clavé-Darbon Company together and performed in France and Germany until 1955, when André Clavé was forced to leave the theatre to pursue other paths. François Darbon then followed a more solitary path, working from production to production and film to film. He would nonetheless cross paths with Clavé again—both men bound by unwavering loyalty—when Clavé asked him to train African radio announcers in diction at the school he directed, the Studio-École (a school created by Pierre Schaeffer in preparation for decolonization). At 25, Darbon married the lovely Nathalie Manoyloff, of Russian origin. They had a daughter, Sophie. Sophie Darbon is an author, actress, and director like her father. She recently published a children’s tale, Sotisette Planplan et la clé des fées, with Edilivre, dedicated to her parents.

as Adjudant-chef Picard

as Bösig
1967

as Doctor
1958

as Adjudant-chef Picard
1968

as Ogle le Barbier
1972

as Marc Hawkins
1966

as Le beau-père de Colette
1962

as Amédée
1960

as Commissioner Madelin
1962

as l'ordonnance du capitaine
1955

as Le beau-père de Colette (segment "Antoine et Colette")
1962

as L'oberlieutenant
1955

as Morin
1963
as Prosecutor
1975

as Chancelier de Marillac
1983
as Simon
1981

as Baptiste
1975

as Prosecutor
1975

as Grosbois
1973

as Adjudant-chef Picard
1968

as Arcas
1968

as Brigadier
1966

as Inspector Couture
1964

as Djorge, the father
1963

as Morin
1963

as Le beau-père de Colette
1962

as Le beau-père de Colette (segment "Antoine et Colette")
1962

as Peasant
1962

as Commissioner Madelin
1962

as Amédée
1960

as Camille
1959

as Volda
1958

as Popaul
1958

as l'avocat général
1958

as Gino, le bras droit de Charlemagne
1958

as l’inspecteur de police principal
1958

as Doctor
1958

as Police commissioner
1956
as Marc Hawkins
4 ep.