Murielle Magellan (born 1967) is a French writer and theater director.
She was born Murielle Dbjay in Limoges and grew up in Montauban. She took the name Murielle Magellan when she moved to Paris at the age of 17. Magellan studied at the Studio des Variétés and the school of the Théâtre national de Chaillot there. She lived in Montreuil for ten years and has lived in Rosny-sous-Bois since 2001. [1] [2] [3]
She was coauthor for the television mini-series Petits meurtres en famille which won a Globe de Cristal Award in 2006. [1] She was also coauthor for the television film La Joie de vivre , based on the novel by Émile Zola. [4]
Édouard Molinaro was a French film director and screenwriter.
Nicolas Moreau is a French actor and a theatre director.
Catherine Mouchet is a French actress.
Didier Decoin is a French screenwriter and writer awarded the Prix Goncourt in 1977.
Sabine Quindou is a French journalist and presenter, born 1970 in Fort de France, Martinique. Quindou is known for co-hosting the popular science TV show, C'est pas sorcier with Jamy Gourmaud and Frédéric Courant, produced by France 3. She presented 188 episodes of C'est pas sorcier from 1999 to 2013.
Cyrille Thouvenin is a French actor. Former pupil of Cours Florent and a graduate of the National Conservatory of Dramatic Art.
Thibault Vinçon is a French film and theater actor.
Les Petits Meurtres d'Agatha Christie is a French comédie policière television program consisting of two series based loosely on Agatha Christie's works of detective fiction, first broadcast on France 2 on 9 January 2009. In English-speaking countries, Series One is titled "The Little Murders of Agatha Christie" and Series Two is titled "Agatha Christie's Criminal Games". Series One takes place in the 1930s with Commissaire Larosière and Inspecteur Lampion. Series Two is set in the mid-1950s through early 1960s with Commissaire Swan Laurence, journalist Alice Avril, and Laurence's secretary, Marlène Leroy. Series One streams with English subtitles in the United States on Acorn TV and MHz Choice, Series Two streams with English subtitles in the United States on MHz Choice and in Australia on SBS. The thirty-eight episodes to the end of Series Two include adaptations of thirty-six of Christie's works.
Emmanuelle Bouaziz is a French actress, dancer and singer.
Delphine Depardieu is a French actress. She is Alain Depardieu's daughter, and Gérard Depardieu's niece. After her training at the École internationale de création audiovisuelle et de réalisation (EICAR), at the Cours Simon and Jean-Laurent Cochet's course, she was rapidly drawn to the stage and the cinema. On stage, she has acted with Roland Giraud, Paul Belmondo and Alexandre Brasseur.
Luba Jurgenson is a French-speaking woman of letters.
Simon Liberati is a French writer and journalist. For his novels, he has received the Prix de Flore (2009), Prix Femina (2011) and Prix Renaudot (2022).
Valérie Zenatti is a French writer, translator and screenwriter.
Élodie Frenck is a Peruvian–Swiss–French actress, born 31 July 1974 in Lausanne, Switzerland. She is known for playing the character of Marlène Leroy in the French TV series Les Petits Meurtres d'Agatha Christie.
Xavier Lemaître is a French actor.
Marc Cholodenko, is a French novelist, translator, poet, screenwriter and dialoguist.
Alexis Michalik is a Franco-British actor, scriptwriter and director. He adapted Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet into his play R & J and he has written and staged his own plays, including Le Porteur d'histoire, Le Cercle des illusionnistes, Edmond and Intra Muros. He has acted in a number of films, including Sagan by Diane Kurys and Le Chant du loup by Abel Lanzac and he has acted in a number of TV series, mini-series, and TV films, including the series Kaboul Kitchen by Allan Mauduit and Jean-Patrick Benes. He has received various Molière awards for his plays.
Michel de Roy was a French writer.
Sandrine Revel is a French bande dessinée illustrator and author of comics.
Marie Jaffredo is a French BD comics scriptwriter and cartoonist of Breton and Norman origin.