Marcel Dalio Movies and Career Information
Jul 17, 1900
Paris
Actor
Marcel Dalio (17 July 1900, Paris – 20 November 1983) was a French character actor. He had major roles in two of Jean Renoir's most famous films, Grand Illusion and The Rules of the Game. Dalio was born Israel Moshe Blauschild in Paris to Romanian-Jewish immigrant parents. He performed in cabarets, revues and stage plays in the 1920s and acted in French films in the 1930s. After divorcing his first wife, he married seventeen-year-old actress Madeleine LeBeau in 1938. In June 1940, LeBeau and Dalio left Paris ahead of the invading German army and reached Lisbon. It took them two months to get visas to Chile. However, when their ship stopped in Mexico, they were stranded (along with around 200 other passengers) when the visas they had purchased turned out to be forgeries. Eventually they were able to get temporary Canadian passports and entered the United States. Both of Dalio's parents would later die in Nazi concentration camps. In Hollywood, Dalio was never able to rescale the heights of prominence that he had enjoyed in France. Dalio appeared in 19 movies in America during the Second World War, in stereotypical roles as Frenchman. In German-occupied France, the Nazis used his
- Marcel Dalio Movies before 2012
- Big Risk (Classe tous risques) 2005
- Sabrina 1995
- How to Steal a Million 1966
- List of Adrian Messenger 1963
- Donovan's Reef (1963) 1963
- Song Without End (1960) 1960
- Lucky Me 1954
- Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953) 1953
- To Have and Have Not 1944
- Grand Illusion (La grande illusion) 1937
- Le Petit garçon de l'ascenseur
- Mad Adventures of Rabbi Jacob
- Razzia sur la chnouf
- Cartouche
- Happy Time
- On the Riviera (1951)
- Catch-22
- The Rules of the Game
- Pillow Talk