- Born
- Place
Corinne Marchand
Corrine Marchand began her career as a vocalist, singing in nightclubs, operettas and revues. In addition, she was a successful photographic model who eventually made her motion picture debut as an oriental dancer in Cadet Rousselle (1954). After several years playing minor parts, she hit the big time as the sad, pensive titular protagonist of Agnès Varda's Cléo from 5 to 7 (1962). In the role of the beautiful, vain and superstitious Parisian pop singer Cléo Victoire who confronts her mortality, Marchand was spot-on casting and gave a performance which is still regarded as iconic in the French New Wave cinema of the sixties. 'Cleo' was further enhanced by Marchand's charming rendition of Michel Legrand's "Sans Toi", "La Joyeuse" and "La Menteuse". The actress never had another role to match this, despite significant leads in several international and French productions like Nunca pasa nada (1963), The Hour of Truth (1965), Les Sultans (1966), the Italo western Man from Nowhere (1966), the dour Charles Bronson thriller Rider on the Rain (1970) and the rollicking gangland crime drama Borsalino (1970).
Aside from her work as an actress, Marchand developed a lucrative side project as an apiarist, following her graduation from the Charenton School of Beekeeping
As actor
Orchestra Class
The Beaches of Agnès
Innocence
Cléo from 5 to 7: Remembrances and Anecdotes
The Perfume of Yvonne
Bandits
Louisiana
Nestor Burma, détective de choc
Hothead
Hot Acts of Love
The Purloined Letter
Travels with My Aunt
Liza
Le Cygne
The Artless One
Borsalino
Rider on the Rain
Le canard en fer blanc
Vacances pour Jessica
Loose in the Trigger
Arizona Colt
The Sultans
The Hour of Truth
Nothing Ever Happens
Cléo from 5 to 7
Lust
The Seven Deadly Sins
Liberté I
Lola
Stop the Massacre