
Mylène Demongeot
Acting
Born 1935-09-29 · Nice, Alpes-Maritimes, France · Died 2022-12-01
Mylène Demongeot (born Marie-Hélène Demongeot; 29 September 1935 – 1 December 2022) was a French film, television and theatre actress and author with a career spanning seven decades and more than 100 credits in French, Italian, English and Japanese speaking productions. Demongeot became a star at age 21 with her portrayal of Abigail Williams in The Crucible (1957) which garnered her a BAFTA Award for Most Promising Newcomer to Leading Film Roles nomination and the best actress prize at the socialist Karlovy Vary International Film Festival. Some other notable film roles include Elsa in Otto Preminger's Bonjour Tristesse (1958), alongside Deborah Kerr and David Niven, and as Milady de Winter in Les Trois Mousquetaires (1961). A "veteran of cinema" who started as one of the blond sex symbols of the 1950s and 1960s, she managed to avoid typecasting by exploring many film genres including thrillers, westerns, comedies, swashbucklers, period films and even pepla, such as Romulus and the Sabines (1961) opposite Roger Moore or Gold for the Caesars (1963). Demongeot also has a cult following based on the Fantomas trilogy, as Hélène Gurn opposite Louis de Funès and Jean Marais: Fantômas (1964), Fantômas Unleashed (1965) and Fantômas Against Scotland Yard (1967). Thirty years later, she starred again in another one of France's most successful comedy trilogies as Madame Pic in Fabien Onteniente's Camping (2006), Camping 2 (2010) and Camping 3 (2016). She was twice nominated for Best Supporting Actress at the César Awards for 36 Quai des Orfèvres (2004) and French California (2006). In 2007, she was made a Commander of the Ordre des Arts et de Lettres of the French Republic. In 2017, she was inducted into the Légion d'Honneur by ethologist and neurologist Boris Cyrulnik, with the rank of Chevalier. She remained popular until her passing from peritoneal cancer. At the time of her death, she was starring in Thomas Gilou's film Maison de retraite (2022) alongside Gérard Depardieu, one of the biggest box office hits of 2022 in France. Through an Élysée Palace official tribune, President Emmanuel Macron paid a long tribute to her which included : "we salute the career of a great figure in the French Seventh Art, who knew how to shine in all its genres to move all French people". Demongeot was born in September 1935 in Nice, Alpes-Maritimes, the daughter and only child of Alfred Jean Demongeot, born Nice, 30 January 1897 (himself the son of Marie Joseph Marcel Demongeot, career soldier, and Clotilde Faussonne di Clavesana, an Italian contessa) and Claudia Troubnikova, born 17 May 1904 in Kharkiv (Ukraine, Russian Empire). Her parents, both actors themselves, had met in Shanghai, China, where her half-brother, Léonid Ivantov, from the first marriage of her mother, was born, in Harbin on 17 December 1923. Like hundreds of other major European figures of stage and screen, she trained at the 'Cours Simon' in Paris where her classmates included Jean-Pierre Cassel, Claude Berri and Guy Bedos. She was a classically trained pianist and her first ambition was of becoming a professional. ... Source: Article "Mylène Demongeot" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Acting

Les Scandaleuses
Self

Simenon et l'affaire du cinéma
Self - Actrice

Retirement Home
Simone Tournier

Fantômas: A Thoroughly Modern Villain
Self

Camping : Histoire d'un succès
Self - Actor

Le Fantôme de Laurent Terzieff
Self (archive footage)

Inside
Rose Da Costa

Mylène Demongeot, la milady du cinéma
Self

À la recherche de... Pierre Richard
Self - Actress

The Midwife
Rolande

Trois mariages et un coup de foudre
Mamita
Amanda
Self

Camping 3
Laurette Pic

Capitaine Marleau
Louise Lemaire

Des roses en hiver
Madeleine

Les mauvaises têtes
Virginie

On My Way
Fanfan

La Balade de Lucie
La mère de Lucie

Louis de Funès, l'homme qui a passé le mur du son
Self (archive footage)

If You Die, I'll Kill You
Geneviève

Camping 2
Laurette Pic

Oscar and the Lady in Pink
Lily, la mère de Rose

So Woman!
Mme Vallardin
Urok Francuzskogo
Herself

Beneath the Rooftops of Paris
Thérèse

Le fantôme du lac
Louise Perreau

La Californie
Katia

Camping
Laurette Pic

La Tête haute
La Tina

Victoire
la mère