Known for Acting

Jacques Dumesnil (born Marie Émile Eugène André Joly ; 9 November 1903 – 8 May 1998) was a French film and television actor. Jacques Dumesnil was born as Marie Émile Eugène André Joly on November 9, 1903, in Paris, France. Before becoming an actor, he received training as a mechanical engineer. After starting as a secretary at the aviation school, he became an industrial designer, a profession he left to devote himself to the theater. He adopted the pseudonym Dumesnil because of the admiration he had to French actor Camille Dumény. He started out as a fanciful singer in a café located in Paris Place de l'Hôtel de Ville , he was paid in sandwiches and glasses of beer. Dumesnil started on stage in 1927 and divided his career between theater and cinema. Having spent two years at the Comédie-Française , he played among other things in Les Tontons flingueurs and provided the French voice of Charlie Chaplin in Monsieur Verdoux (1947) and A King in New York (1957). His role as Duke of Plessis-Vaudreuil in the television series Au Plaisir de Dieu , earned him a resurgence of popularity and the 7 d'Or for best actor. Jacques Dumesnil had a son, Pierre Joly dit Dumesnil , who was a French swimming champion and participated in the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki , Finland.
1963
as Louis « le Mexicain »
1954
as Alicinous
1955
as Marshal Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte
1951
as Professor Ferri
1961
as Hans, le bourreau
1956
as Richelieu
1958
as Le docteur Henri Girane
1939
as Albert Durant, stockbroker and poker player
1956
as General Dumont
1934
as Gangster
1942
as Max de Bray
1956
as Self / Narrator (voice)
1942
as Guy Carbonnel
1964
as Police director
1954
as d'Artagnan
1938
as Lawyer
1957
as Gilbert Odet
1949
as Paul-Louis Courier
1935
as Giannino Sforza, Duke of Milano
1938
as Rolland