6.3
Avg Rating
Pascale Petit (born Anne-Marie Pettit; 27 February 1938) is a French actress. She appeared in more than fifty films from 1957 to 2001
Le Grand Échiquier
1972
Pascale Petit (born Anne-Marie Pettit; 27 February 1938) is a French actress. She appeared in more than fifty films from 1957 to 2001
Working as a hairdresser, she entered films when her beauty was noticed by actress Françoise Lugagne whose husband Raymond Rouleau was searching for young actresses for his directorial debut The Crucible (1957). Petit played the role of Mary Warren.
The following year she was awarded the Prix Suzanne Bianchetti in 1958 for her role as Rosalie in One Life (1958). During the 1960s Petit appeared as the female lead in several European international co-productions such as portraying Cleopatra in the 1962 film A Queen for Caesar. Petit appeared opposite Roger Moore, Ray Danton, Jeffrey Hunter, Guy Madison and Curd Jurgens. In the 1970s and 1980s she performed a variety of roles on French Television.
Source: Article "Pascale Petit (actress)" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Gender
Female
Birthday
February 27, 1938
Birthplace
Paris, France
Also Known As
The Sweet Aunts
1975
The Spy Who Went Into Hell
1965
No Man's Land
1962
The Agression
1988
Comment épouser un premier ministre
1964
Letters of a Novice
1960
Season of Peace in Paris
1981
Almost a Hero
1967
Where Are You Taking That Woman
1966
Find a Place to Die
1968
End of Desire
1958
A Mistress for the Summer
1960
Women Are Weak
1959
Nights of Boccaccio
1972
Demons at Midnight
1961
Les Siffleurs
1964
The Females
1970
Sexy Susan Sins Again
1968
The Cheaters
1958
Four Times That Night
1971
+ 21 more movies