
Elvira Popescu
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Elvira Popescu (10 May 1894 – 11 December 1993) was a Romanian-French stage and film actress and theatre director. During the 1930s and 1940s, she starred in a number of French comedy films. Born in Bucharest, Popescu studied drama at the Music and Drama Conservatory in her native city, under the guidance of Constantin Nottara and Aristizza Romanescu. In 1911 Grigore Brezeanu was making the first Romanian films to deal with fiction. He employed Popesco as well as other leading actors like Nottara and Romanescu. The first two films were called "Fatal Love" and "Spin a Yarn". No copies are known of these films. Popesco made her debut at the National Theatre Bucharest at age 16. In 1912, she played herself in the movie Independența României, directed by Aristide Demetriade. In 1919 she became artistic director of the Excelsior Theatre. In 1921, Popescu started Teatrul Mic, which she managed in parallel with the Excelsior. In 1923, she starred in the movie Ţigăncuşa de la iatac, directed by Alfred Halm. At the urging of Louis Verneuil, the French playwright, Popescu moved in 1924 to Paris. Under Verneuil's direction, she played the leading role in Ma Cousine de Varsovie, at the Théâtre Michel (1923). She also played in Tovaritch (1933), La Machine infernale (1954), Nina (1949), and La Mamma (1957). Later on, she was director of Théâtre de Paris (1956–1965), and Théâtre Marigny (1965–1978).[5] At age 84, she played again in La Mamma. Elvira Popescu also played in movies, such as La Présidente (Fernand Rivers, 1938), Tricoche et Cacolet (Pierre Colombier, 1938), Ils étaient neuf célibataires (Sacha Guitry, 1939), Paradis perdu (Abel Gance, 1940), Austerlitz (Abel Gance, 1960),[6] and Purple Noon (René Clément, 1960). Shortly after her debut in 1910, Popescu married comedian Aurel Athanasescu and they had a daughter named Tatiana. After a few years, she divorced, and married Ion Manolescu-Strunga, Minister of Industry and Commerce (who was to die in Sighet prison in the 1950s). Her third husband was Count Maximilien Sébastien Foy (born in Paris on 17 April 1900, died in Neuilly-sur-Seine on 11 November 1967). She died in Paris at age 99, and was interred at Père Lachaise Cemetery. Source: Article "Elvira Popescu" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Known for
Credits

Purple Noon (1960)
as Mrs. Popova

The Battle of Austerlitz (1960)
as Lætitia Bonaparte

La Mamma (1966)
as Rosaria

The King (1936)
as Thérèse Marnix

Four Flights to Love (1939)
as Sonia Vorochine

Nine Bachelors (1939)
as Countess Stacia Batchefskaïa

La Voyante (1972)
as Karma, la voyante

Dora Nelson (1935)
as Dora Nelson / Suzanne Verdier

Deputy Eusèbe (1939)
as Mariska

The House Across the Street (1937)
as Mme Anna

The Mondesir Heir (1940)
as Erika, l'aventurière

Sa meilleure cliente (1932)
as Edwige

In Venice, One Night (1937)
as Nadia Mortal

Frédérica (1942)
as Frédérica

Sacred Woods (1939)
as Francine Margerie

Fou d'amour (1943)
as Arabella

L'Amant de madame Vidal (1936)
Actor

Mon curé chez les riches (1938)
as Lisette Cousinet

The stranger (1931)
as Dora Clarkson

Behind the Facade (1939)
as Mrs. Rameau, wife of an industrialist and mistress of Alfredo

Parade in 7 Nights (1941)
as Madame Fanny

The Blue Veil (1942)
as Mona Lorenza

The Man of the Day (1937)
as Mona Thalia

Le Valet maître (1941)
Actor

My Cousin From Warsaw (1931)
as Sonia Varilovna

The Green Dress (1937)
as La duchesse de Maulévrier

The Fatted Calf (1939)
as Princess Dorothée

La Présidente (1938)
as Vérotcha

Tigancusa de la iatac (1923)
as Maria Tortusanu - Vasil's fiancée

Bargekeepers Daughter (1938)
as The Queen of Silistrie
Une femme chipée (1934)
as Hélène Larsonnier

Tricoche and Cacolet (1938)
as Bernardine Van der Pouf

Le Club des Aristocrates (1937)
as La comtesse Irène Waldapowska

L'âge d'or (1942)
as Véra Termutzki

Mademoiselle Swing (1942)
as Sofia de Vinci





