Jean-Paul Belmondo
- Born:
- April 9, 1933, Neuilly-sur-Seine, near Paris, France
- Died:
- September 6, 2021, Paris (aged 88)
- Married To:
- Elodie Constant (1952–1968)
- Natty Belmondo (2002–2008)
- Movies/Tv Shows (Acted In):
- "L'incorrigible" (1975)
- "Les tribulations d'un Chinois en Chine" (1965)
- "À pied, à cheval et en voiture" (1957)
- "Le corps de mon ennemi" (1976)
- "Week-end à Zuydcoote" (1964)
- "Le voleur" (1967)
- "La viaccia" (1961)
- "Classe tous risques" (1960)
- "À double tour" (1959)
- "Les misérables" (1995)
- "Un drôle de dimanche" (1958)
- "Amazone" (2000)
- "Cartouche" (1962)
- "L'aîné des Ferchaux" (1963)
- "Échappement libre" (1964)
- "Désiré" (1996)
- "L'inconnu dans la maison" (1992)
- "La sirène du Mississipi" (1969)
- "Amours célèbres" (1961)
- "Peut-être" (1999)
- "Moderato cantabile" (1960)
- "Le solitaire" (1987)
- "La chasse à l'homme" (1964)
- "Les cent et une nuits de Simon Cinéma" (1995)
- "Lettere di una novizia" (1960)
- "Par un beau matin d'été" (1965)
- "La ciociara" (1960)
- "Le magnifique" (1973)
- "Un singe en hiver" (1962)
- "L'animal" (1977)
- "Riviera-Story" (1961)
- "Ho!" (1968)
- "Dragées au poivre" (1963)
- "L'homme de Rio" (1964)
- "Pierrot le fou" (1965)
- "Les copains du dimanche" (1958)
- "Léon Morin, prêtre" (1961)
- "Un homme qui me plaît" (1969)
- "Les tricheurs" (1958)
- "L'alpagueur" (1976)
- "Le casse" (1971)
- "Le marginal" (1983)
- "Hold-Up" (1985)
- "Les distractions" (1960)
- "Les mariés de l'an deux" (1971)
- "Le guignolo" (1980)
- "Un homme et son chien" (2008)
- "Peau de banane" (1963)
- "Flic ou voyou" (1979)
- "Tendre voyou" (1966)
- "Itinéraire d'un enfant gâté" (1988)
- "L'as des as" (1982)
- "Borsalino" (1970)
- "Une femme est une femme" (1961)
- "1 chance sur 2" (1998)
- "Un nommé La Rocca" (1961)
- "Docteur Popaul" (1972)
- "Le doulos" (1963)
- "Mare matto" (1963)
- "Les morfalous" (1984)
- "Dieu a choisi Paris" (1969)
- "Joyeuses Pâques" (1984)
- "Stavisky..." (1974)
- "Sois belle et tais-toi" (1958)
- "Ein Engel auf Erden" (1959)
- "Un coeur gros comme ça" (1961)
- "Le cerveau" (1969)
- "Peur sur la ville" (1975)
- "À bout de souffle" (1960)
- "Casino Royale" (1967)
- "Cent mille dollars au soleil" (1964)
- "Les acteurs" (2000)
- "Is Paris Burning?" (1966)
- "Le professionnel" (1981)
- "L'héritier" (1973)
- "La française et l'amour" (1960)
- "La scoumoune" (1972)
Jean-Paul Belmondo (born April 9, 1933, Neuilly-sur-Seine, near Paris, France—died September 6, 2021, Paris) was a French motion picture actor who embodied the antiheroic spirit of the French New Wave in his early performances and later starred in and produced many commercially successful films that highlighted his graceful agility and easygoing charm.
The son of sculptor Paul Belmondo, Jean-Paul spent his childhood in close contact with the arts. After a turbulent education in which he often played the class clown, he had a brief stint as an amateur boxer, but he abandoned the ring to study acting at the National Conservatory of Dramatic Art in Paris. Despite his obvious talent, the irreverent attitude he adopted toward his instructors prevented him from winning the highest honours when he graduated in 1956.
Belmondo soon made the transition from stage to screen with a series of minor roles in films by established directors. His commanding screen presence caught the attention of other major directors, although his unconventional looks limited the number of offers he received. He was usually cast as a discontented rebel or a common criminal, as in Claude Chabrol’s A double tour (1959; Web of Passion).

It was with a similar role in Jean-Luc Godard’s seminal debut feature A bout de souffle (1960; Breathless) that Belmondo delivered his landmark performance. His portrayal of a disaffected, amoral street punk combined the cynical world-weariness of Humphrey Bogart with the naïveté of a bumbling crook, incorporating a compelling mixture of toughness, spontaneity, and comic timing. The film and the character he played created an entire myth around Belmondo, earning him comparisons in the French media to the American actor James Dean.
Belmondo soon showed a willingness to destroy this myth by taking roles that contrasted sharply with his established screen persona, including a worker involved in an impossible love affair in Peter Brook’s screen adaptation of Marguerite Duras’s Moderato cantabile (1960; Seven Days…Seven Nights), a gentle intellectual in Vittorio De Sica’s La ciociara (1961; Two Women), and a morally resolute priest in Jean-Pierre Melville’s Léon Morin, prêtre (1961; Léon Morin, Priest). These roles demonstrated that, despite his hardened exterior, Belmondo was capable of great nuance and sensitivity.
Not only was Belmondo able to work across different character types, he moved successfully among different types of films. He made the transition from artistic films to popular cinema with his appearance in several works directed by Philippe de Broca, including the action-comedy Cartouche (1962; Sword of Blood), in which he masterfully portrayed a Robin Hood figure, and the engaging L’Homme de Rio (1964; That Man from Rio), a fast-moving, fantasy-filled spoof of chase films. Known for performing his own stunts, Belmondo continued to star in entertaining action films and comedies that proved immensely popular with European audiences.
In the late 1980s and ’90s Belmondo again changed his image, this time from action hero to mature dramatic actor, giving notable performances in Claude Lelouch’s Itinéraire d’un enfant gâté (1988; “Itinerary of a Spoiled Child”), for which he won a César (France’s top film award), and Les Misérables (1995), playing multiple roles as the hero in Lelouch’s reworking of the Victor Hugo classic. He also returned to the theatre, starring in productions of Edmond Rostand’s Cyrano de Bergerac and Jean-Paul Sartre’s Kean. Belmondo’s later films include Amazone (2000; Amazon). In 2001 he suffered a stroke that left him unable to work for several years. Belmondo returned to the screen in 2008 in Un homme et son chien (A Man and His Dog). At his insistence, the role showcased rather than concealed his disabilities.
Belmondo’s autobiography, Trente ans et vingt-cinq films (“Thirty Years and Twenty-five Films”), was published in 1963.