- Born
- Died
- Place
Mireille Balin
Mireille Césarine Balin (born Blanche Mireille Césarine Balin; 20 July 1909, in Monte Carlo – 9 November 1968 in Paris) was a French-Italian actress.
Balin was born near Monte Carlo. Her father, Charles Balin, was a French newspaper publisher. Her mother was Italian. Her education came at finishing schools. She was a policewoman in Paris until friends urged her to take a screen test.
Balin posed for some advertisements in Paris before she began acting in films. Considered one of the finest actresses of French cinema in the 1930s, she was discredited by her fraternization with the Nazis. During Nazi occupation of France, she became romantically involved with an officer of the Wehrmacht and at the end of war she was imprisoned in Fresnes until January 1945. She retired from film in 1947.
Balin arrived in Hollywood in 1937 with a staff of servants and with 28 trunks containing "most of her worldly possessions.
During the final 10 years of her life she lived in a "charitable home". Balin died in 1968, aged 59.
As actor
Love and Sex under Nazi Occupation
La dernière chevauchée
Malaria
L'assassin a peur la nuit
Haut le vent
The Trump Card
Gambling Hell
The Woman I Loved the Most
Fromont Young and Risler Elder
Threats
The Siege of the Alcazar
Gunshot
Cas de conscience
Land of Fire
Immediate Call
Captain Benoit
Golden Venus
Pépé le Moko
Naples Under the Kiss of Fire
Lady Killer
Girls of Paris
Le Roman d'un spahi
Marie des angoisses
Si j'étais le patron
Vive la compagnie
We Found a Naked Woman
Weaker Sex
Don Quixote
Vive la classe