Jean Dasté
Known for: Acting
Born: August 17, 1904 in Paris, France - Died: October 14, 1994
Jean Dasté (born Jean Georges Gustave Dasté; 18 September 1904 – 15 October 1994) was a French actor and theatre director. Although Jean Dasté is best known for his career on stage as both an actor and director in a variety of works including those by Shakespeare and Molière, he made his first appearance on screen in a 1932 Jean Renoir film (Boudu sauvé des eaux), and 57 years later appeared in his final film at the age of 85. He played also the main character in two Jean Vigo movies, L'Atalante and Zéro de conduite. Later, he worked also with Alain Resnais and François Truffaut. He married Danish-born actress Marie-Hélène Copeau (1902–1994), the daughter of the influential French writer, editor, and drama critic Jacques Copeau (1879–1949) and Agnès Thomsen. In 1947, he became the founding director of the Comedie de St.-Etienne stage company in the town of Saint-Étienne in the Loire department. A college and a theatre in the town are named in his honour. Source: Article "Jean Dasté" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA.
Known for
Showing 24 of 40 titles
The Man Who Loved Women
L'urologue
The Wild Child
Professor Philippe Pinel
Grand Illusion
L'instituteur
Z
Illya Coste
The War Is Over
The Man in Charge
Les Îles
Jean
Utopia
Jean
The Green Room
Bernard Humbert
Zero for Conduct
Supervisor Huguet
L'Atalante
Jean
Life Is Ours
L'instituteur / Teacher
Boudu Saved from Drowning
L'Étudiant
A Week's Vacation
le père de Laurence
Under Western Eyes
Georges
The Time of the Cherries
Director's son
Muriel, or the Time of Return
L'homme à la chèvre / The Goat Man
Sideral Cruises
Pépin
A Star to the Sun
Picpus
Le clerc (uncredited)
Adieu Léonard
Porcelain mender
St. Val's Mystery
The bailiff
The Great Pack
Bailiff (uncredited)
The Body of My Enemy
Le gardien du chantier
Docile Night
Le chauffeur de taxi