Anne-Élisabeth Blateau

Anne-Élisabeth Blateau
Born (1976-07-28) 28 July 1976
Nationality French
Occupation actress and playwright

Anne-Élisabeth Blateau (born 28 July 1976) is a French actress and playwright.

Biography

Having been a student in public law at Sciences Po Paris, she played in 2000 Demand in marriage and Anton Chekhov's The Bear (directed by Jean Périmony) as part of a tour, and in Jedem das Seine (To each his Own) with Catherine Verlaguet (directed by Véronique Balme) at Theatre of Dreams in Paris. The following year, she won, as an author, the prize for best original work in the Festival Theatre Young Savigny-sur-Orge for Balthazar, a one-act comedy.

After being one of the leading interpreters of short films, The little cry by Cédric de Bragança and Scoub 2 by Stephane Berla (selected Universciné Festival), she was performing at the Nesle theater in 2002, with Francis Prieur and Cédric Villenave for This strange animal, the part of Gabriel Arout (after a story of Anton Chekhov), directed by Michel Vuillermoz.

In 2003 she wrote and played Pouët-Pouët, a one-woman show (directed by Coralie Fargeat) in two places in Paris (Le Cercle and Le Bec Fin). She is also part of Treviso Theatre animation team and works as a writer and actress for chronic Should we? (With Maurice Barthélémy, and Les Robins des Bois), broadcast on Canal +.

In 2004, she played in the Edgar theater in The fires of love burn it, a work she wrote and directed.

In 2005 she was the interpreter, with Frédéric Gorny, in Behind, a Short Film by Gregory Monro, selection of several festivals (Bolzano, Lausanne, Hamburg, Trouville in 2006, Rio de Janeiro in 2007). She also appeared in a one-woman show entitled Little Mop in Paris, and Providence. She also plays a school teacher in the video of Fatal Picards, Sleep my son.

In 2006, she played in two parts Dominique Peter Devers, Rififi in the morgue and Rififi among penguins. She collaborated on the writing of sketches for the series Samantha oops!.

From September to December 2007, she participate in Made in Palmade, broadcast by Pierre Palmade every Sunday on France 3.

In 2008, she played in the play Operation cousin in The Fountain Theatre in Paris and has signed a contribution entitled "Mistress without Breillat?" in the book Square Art: Byron, Barbey d'Aurevilly, Dali, Jean-Edern Hallier by Jean-Pierre Thiollet.[1]

From October 2008 to April 2009, we could also see the scene of the Fountain Theatre in the play The Comic with Pierre Palmade.

Anne-Élisabeth Blateau was awarded a Mention for Best Actress at the 6th Short Film Festival of Saint-Maur (17-19 October 2008),[2] for her role in Hi Peter, a film directed by Jules Thénier (scenario by Jean Vocat), and was invited in 2009 the Short Film Corner at Cannes and awarded in 2010 to the best Film Festival (Audience Award and Best Screenplay).[3]

In 2010, she played the role of Marceline in the TV movie Fais danser la poussière of Christian Faure and the role of the drunk waitress in The Grand Restaurant.

Until 27 July 2013, she played at the Tristan Bernard theater in The Enterprise, and the Troupe to Palmade, works she co-authored.[4]

She is also showing the new play by Pierre Palmade, Son of the comic, which has played since September 27, 2013 at St. George Theatre.[5]

In 2015, she signed a contribution entitled "Alone on stage" in the book 88 notes for solo piano by Jean-Pierre Thiollet.[6]

Filmography

Film

Television

Short films

Théâtre

One-woman show

Awards

References

  1. Notice n°FRBNF41402421, BNF, catalogue BN Opale ; Institut d'art de Chicago, http://ryerson.artic.edu/search/?searchtype=e&SORT=D&searcharg=blateau&searchscope=1
  2. lehelloco.fr
  3. filmdeculte.com
  4. « L'Entreprise de Pierre Palmade ne connaît pas la crise », Sandrine Blanchard, Le Monde, 4 juin 2013, http://www.lemonde.fr/culture/article/2013/06/03/l-entreprise-de-pierre-palmade-ne-connait-pas-la-crise_3422634_3246.html
  5. http://www.evous.fr/Le-Fils-du-comique-Pierre-Palmade-est-encore-Pierre-Mazar,1183085.html
  6. catalogue.bnf.fr
This article incorporates information from the equivalent article on the French Wikipedia.
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