
Mireille Darc
Acting
Mireille Darc (15 May 1938 – 28 August 2017) was a French actress, director, photographer, singer and model. She appeared as a lead character in Jean-Luc Godard's 1967 film Weekend. Darc was a Knight of the Legion of Honour and Commander of the National Order of Merit. Alain Delon was her longtime co-star and companion. Born Mireille Christiane Gabrielle Aimée Aigroz in Toulon, she attended the Conservatory of Dramatic Arts in Toulon and moved to Paris in 1959. Darc's debuted in Claude Barma's television drama Du côté de l'enfer (aka, La Grande Brétèche, 1960). Her first leading role came in another production for French television, Jean Prat's Hauteclaire (1961). She starred in Jean-Luc Godard's film Weekend (Week-end, 1967) as Corinne, her highest profile role for international critics; as Christine in The Tall Blond Man with One Black Shoe (Le Grand Blond avec une chaussure noire, 1972) and The Return of the Tall Blond Man with One Black Shoe (Le retour du grand blond, 1974) and alongside Alain Delon and Louis de Funès in several films: Pouic-Pouic (1963), High Lifers (How to Keep the Red Lamp Burning (1965), Jeff (1969), Borsalino (uncredited, 1970), The Love Mates (Madly, 1970), Icy Breasts (Les Seins de glace, 1974), Death of a Corrupt Man (Mort d'un pourri, 1977), Man in a Hurry (L'Homme pressé, 1977), and the television series Frank Riva (2003). Darc had a heart condition from childhood, which required open-heart surgery in 1980. She was seriously injured in a car accident on July 7, 1983, in a tunnel in the Aosta Valley, Italy, suffering a fractured spine and other injuries that required three months of immobilization in a hospital in Geneva, Switzerland. Although they had recently separated about two weeks prior to the accident after a fifteen-year relationship, Delon rushed to Aosta when he heard about the accident, and left separately for Geneva by automobile during the night. She quit her film career, but she returned to television in the 1990s. In 2006, French President Jacques Chirac awarded Darc the Legion of Honour. In 2013, Darc underwent further open heart surgery, and during 2016 she suffered several hemorrhages. She died on 28 August 2017 in Paris in a coma at the age of 79. Source: Article "Mireille Darc" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA.
Known For

1982
Champs-Elysées
1982 · tv

1998
Vivement dimanche
1998 · tv

1975
Midi Première
1975 · tv

1987
Sacrée soirée
1987 · tv

1975
Les Rendez-vous du dimanche
1975 · tv

1972
Le Grand Échiquier
1972 · tv

1975
Numéro un
1975 · tv

2009
C à vous
2009 · tv

2006
Infrarouge
2006 · tv

1987
Nulle part ailleurs
1987 · tv

1998
Vivement dimanche prochain
1998 · tv

1976
30 millions d'amis
1976 · tv

1990
Stars 90
1990 · tv

1965
Dim Dam Dom
1965 · tv

1967
Casino Royale
1967 · movie

1970
Borsalino
1970 · movie

1967
Weekend
1967 · movie

1994
Les Yeux d'Hélène
1994 · tv

1972
The Tall Blond Man with One Black Shoe
1972 · movie

1969
Monte Carlo or Bust!
1969 · movie

1992
Les Cœurs brûlés
1992 · tv

1981
For a Cop's Hide
1981 · movie

2003
Frank Riva
2003 · tv

1974
Borsalino and Co.
1974 · movie

1996
Terre indigo
1996 · tv

1962
The Devil and the Ten Commandments
1962 · movie

1965
How to Keep the Red Lamp Burning
1965 · movie

1974
The Return of the Tall Blond Man with One Black Shoe
1974 · movie

1972
There Once Was a Cop
1972 · movie

1977
Death of a Corrupt Man
1977 · movie