
Henri Marteau
Acting
Born 1933-01-16 · Reims, France · Died 2005-01-21
Post‑war film enthusiasts will remember the face of Henri Marteau, a fairly prolific supporting actor whose name has since faded somewhat from memory. His early appearances, barely above that of an extra, explain why he is missing from certain credits. He appears for only a few seconds in A Witness in the City by Édouard Molinaro, and in The Big Restaurant with Louis de Funès, where he just as briefly plays the second inspector. In Le Mors aux dents, he plays a minister, then a stranded motorist in Jean L’Hôte’s La Communale, and a trafficker in Une Sale Affaire. His most notable performance is as a French colonist and the father of Catherine Deneuve in Indochine. He was more easily spotted on television, in Les Coquelicots sont revenus and Poil de carotte by Richard Bohringer. He also appeared in numerous episodes of Les Cinq Dernières Minutes with Raymond Souplex, as well as in the later season with Jacques Debary, and in Les Filles du maître de chai. He died in Paris at Hôpital Saint‑Louis at the age of seventy‑two.
Acting

Carrot Top
Le grand-père

Les coquelicots sont revenus
Paul

Joséphine, Guardian Angel
Paul

Les Filles du maître de chai
Léon
La fille des nuages
Germain

The Eagle and the Horse

Les brouches
Fernand

Indochine
Emile Devries

Killing Time
Igor Malevitch
Fred connexion
Poutin

Richelieu ou La journée des dupes
Maréchal de Bassompierre

Docteur Teyran
L'inspecteur Maneaud

Operation Leopard
Chamfort

The Bit Between the Teeth
Le ministre

La boucle d'oreille
Le commissaire

Replay

The Question
Colonel Treguier

Doctor Justice
Saint-Just and the Force of Things
Lazare Carnot

Ardéchois, cœur fidèle
Lyonnais

One Morning in June 1940
Lepage

A Cop
Police Officer Instructor of Shooting

Les Déracinés
Captain Sainbenin

The Confession
Policeman

Le Petit Monde de Marie-Plaisance
Georges Cournebosc

The Unfaithful Wife
Paul

The Restaurant
Le second inspecteur adjoint

The Black Indies
deuxième policier

Without Trumpet or Drum

Les Cinq Dernières Minutes
Louis Prinquiau