Michel Serrault
Serrault had originally set his sights on the priesthood and spent a few months in a seminary before abandoning the calling for show business. He joined with Jean Poiret in a 1953 song and comedy cabaret act and later joined Robert Dhery's famed theater troupe. It wasn't long before he was cast in his first feature roles, supporting appearances in "Ah! Les Belles bacchantes" and "Diabolique" (both 1954), Henri-Georges Clouzot's classic murder thriller starring Simone Signoret. Throughout the late 50s and early 60s, Serrault made sporadic film appearances, concentrating more on his career as a stage and revue performer. In 1964, he first collaborated with Edouard Molinaro (who would later direct "La Cage aux folles") on "La Chasse a l'homme/Male Hunt." While he had a relatively supporting role, Serrault found some shining moments as a professor trying to make sense of the behavioral patterns of sex. His first "cult" film was Philippe de Broca's "King of Hearts" (1966), a favorite of college cineastes in the US and Britain. In the film, Serrault was a barber, one of the inmates of an asylum inhabiting a French town that an army lieutenant (Alan Bates) is trying to evacuate.Throughout the early 70s, the actor continued to appear in featured roles, including the befuddled neighbor in Betrand Blier's Oscar-winning "Preparez vos mouchoirs/Get Out Your Handkerchiefs" (released in France in 1977; in the US in 1978). He reteamed with Blier for an uncredited appearance as the unknown man in the opening scenes of "Buffet froid/Cold Cuts" (1979). In 1981, Serrault did an about turn playing the dramatic role of the inquisitor in Claude Miller's taut psychological thriller "Garde a vue/Under Suspicion," for which he won his second Cesar, and then played Julius Caesar in Jean Yanne's "Deux heures moins le quart avant Jesus Christ" (1982). Serrault has been one of those rare actors whose roles increased in size and scope as he has aged. By 1991, he was Jeanne Moreau's leading man in "La Vielle qui marchait dans la Mer/The Old Lady Who Wades in the Sea." The duo were grifters training a comely young man (Luc Thuillier) to be their crowning achievement, a sexy master con artist, but jealousy and lust intervene. Serrault won his third Cesar for Claude Sautet's "Nelly and M. Arnaud" (1995), playing the latter, a writer who helps Emanuelle Beart only to be tortured by his inability to win her love. The same year, he starred in the farcical "Le Bonheur est dans le pre/Happiness Is in the Fields," as a somewhat milquetoast toilet seat manufacturer who agrees to pose as the head of a farm family and enters a domestic hell. In 1996, Molinaro cast Serrault in the small but pivotal role of King Louis XV in "Beaumarchais L'insolent/Beaumarchais the Scoundrel," based on an historical incident during the monarch's reign.