Cris Campion
Cris Campion (born 1 September 1966) is a French film and television actor, previously known as Thierry Campion.
Born in Versailles,[1] Campion's first leading role came in Roman Polanski’s Pirates (1986).[2] The next year, he was nominated for a César Award for Most Promising Actor for Field of Honor. In Charlemagne, le prince à cheval (1993), he played Pepin the Hunchback.[3]
Campion married Anny Duperey in 1993, two years after she had left Bernard Giraudeau, but they separated after some ten years.[4] Duperey has called Giraudeau “the man of my life” and Campion “the love of my life”.[5]
Appearances
- Le café (1985)
- Pirates (1986), as Jean-Baptiste, called Frog[2]
- Field of Honor (1987), as Pierre Naboulet
- Un sketch (1987)
- Beyond Therapy (1987), as Andrew
- The Ray Bradbury Theater (1988), as Terwilliger
- Le Client (short film, 1988), as Eric
- Chillers (Day of Reckoning) (1990), as Jean Arnaud
- Fortune Express (1991), as Pascal Perkiss
- The Adventures of Young Indiana Jones (1992), as Lieutenant Gaston
- Sup de fric (Christian Gion, 1992), as Victor Dargelas
- Ma sœur, mon amour (1992), as Gaetan
- Le voyage d'Eva (1992), as Laurent
- Charlemagne, le prince à cheval (television, 1993), as Pepin the Hunchback[3]
- Fortitude (television, 1994), as Pierrot
- Taxandria (1995), dubbing
- Navarro (television series, 1995 season), as Antoine
- La Femme de la forêt (1996), as Bertrand
- Exit Wounds (1997), as Cyril
- Le Bahut (television series, 1998 season), as Jérôme
- Une famille formidable (2000), as Vincent
- Marie Fransson (2001), as Atlas
- Méditerranée (2001, television), as Marco
- Gaetan et Rachel en toute innocence (2002)
- Leave Your Hands on My Hips (2003), as Musician
- Julie Lescaut (television series, 2003 episode “Hors la loi”), as Berteau
- Frank Riva (television series, 2004) as Stan
- The Waves (2005)
- Standing Tall (2005, TV)
- Les Hauts plateaux (stage play)
- PJ (television series, 2006 season), as Jean-Marie
- Greco (television, 2007), as Joseph
- Section de recherches (2007), as Alain
- Plus belle la vie (television soap, 2008 season), as Cédric
Notes
- ^ Cris Campion at bfi.org.uk, accessed 24 April 2020
- ^ a b Julia Ain-Krupa, Roman Polanski: A Life in Exile (2010), p. 118
- ^ a b CinémAction TV, Issue 11 (1995), p. 61
- ^ “Anny Duperey: Ce qu'il faisait avec une autre femme ne me regardait pas”, purepeople.com, 27 May 2015, accessed 24 April 2020
- ^ Marine Madelmond, “Anny Duperey: Cris Campion, l’amour de sa vie était son petit fils dans un film”, in Gala, 18 January 2018 (in French)
External links
- Cris Campion at IMDb
- Cris Campion at bfi.org.uk