
Francis Blanche
Acting
François Jean Blanche, known as "Francis Blanche" (20 July 1921 – 6 July 1974) was a French actor, singer, humorist and author. He was a very popular figure on stage, radio and in films, during the 1950s and 1960s. His two daughters, Barbara & Dominique, are artists with their studios in Eze. Blanche was born in an artistic family, mainly of stage actors—including his father Louis Blanche and his uncle, Emmanuel Blanche, who was a painter—. He completed his secondary schooling at fourteen, the youngest in France to do so at the time. In the 1940s and 1950s, Blanche was part of Robert Dhéry's theatrical company Les Branquignols, with whom he played in the film Ah! Les belles bacchantes, starring Robert Dhéry, Colette Brosset (Dhéry's then-wife), and Louis de Funès; directed by Jean Loubignac in 1954. Blanche teamed up with Pierre Dac to form a comic duo best remembered for Le Sâr Rabindranath Duval, a sketch about a phony and nonsensical Indian clairvoyant and guru (1957). They also created a popular and equally nonsensical radiophonic series, loosely based on a highly improbable espionage and conspiration plot, Malheur aux barbus, which was broadcast on Paris Inter in 213 episodes from 1951 to 1952. The same plot and characters were revived on Europe 1 in a series called Signé Furax, enjoying no less than 1,034 daily episodes between 1956 and 1960. Both broadcasts were phenomenal audience successes in the pre-television era. Blanche was also renowned for broadcasting phone pranks, in which he entertained listeners by making the most improbable situations sound plausible. He wrote poems, and the lyrics of 673 songs. On stage, he acted in Tartuffe and Néron and, in 1955, Chevalier du Ciel, an operetta by Luis Mariano at the Gaîté-Lyrique theatre. Blanche also enjoyed a successful cinematographic career, both as an actor and scriptwriter. He appeared as a hard-headed German colonel ("Obersturmführer Schulz") opposite Brigitte Bardot in Babette s'en va-t-en guerre (1959). He was one of the favourite actors of French filmmaker Georges Lautner, and played Maître Folace (a shady solicitor counselling a colourful gangster mob) in Les Tontons flingueurs (1963). Blanche also appeared in Boris Vassilief's Les Barbouzes (1964). He delighted in parodying classical music, adapting famous works such as Schubert's "Die Forelle" (The Trout) into a crazy and slightly risqué piece about a 16-year-old romantic girl obsessed with Schubert's song to the point of giving birth to a live trout while performing it on her piano. Similarly, he turned Beethoven's 5th Symphony into a lengthy and quite repetitive musical glorification of the clothes peg and its fictitious inventor, Jérémie-Victor Opdebec. Blanche died at the age of 52, from a heart attack with a background of untreated Type 1 diabetes. He is buried in Èze cemetery. Source: Article "Francis Blanche" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Born: July 20, 1921 · Paris, France
Filmography (49)

Signé Furax
1981

No Pockets in a Shroud
1974

France, Incorporated
1974

The Edifying and Joyous Story of Colinot
1973

La Grande Bouffe
1973

The Eroticist
1972

Are You Engaged to a Greek Sailor or an Airline Pilot?
1971

The Great Java
1971

The Stud
1970

Erotissimo
1969

À bout portant
1968

The Big Wash
1968

Salut Berthe !
1968

The Men in the Family
1968

Rita the Field Marshal
1967

Loose in the Trigger
1967

Belle de Jour
1967

The Oldest Profession
1967

Order of the Daisy
1967

The Big Grasshopper
1967

Under Your Hat
1965

The Great Spy Chase
1964

The Big Scare
1964

Male Hunt
1964

Champagne for Savages
1964

The World's Most Beautiful Swindlers
1964

Dandelions by the Roots
1964

The Black Tulip
1964

Crooks in Clover
1963

Sweet and Sour
1963

Thank Heaven for Small Favors
1963

The Virgins
1963

People in Luck
1963

Tartarin de Tarascon
1962

Snobs!
1962

The Seventh Juror
1962

Hitch-Hike
1962

Romulus and the Sabines
1961

Love and the Frenchwoman
1960

Some Like It... Cold
1960

The Green Mare
1959

Babette Goes to War
1959

Too Late to Love
1959

Discorama
1959

Toto in Paris
1958

Anyone Can Kill Me
1957

Honoré de Marseille
1956

Cinépanorama
1956

Peek-a-boo
1954
