Known for Acting

Hubert Noël (1924–1987) was a French film actor. A student at the Cours Simon, he made his theatrical debut with Charles Dullin in L'Avare, then moved on to the Centre Dramatique de l'Est, the Théâtre du Vieux-Colombier and the Théâtre du Gymnase, with prestigious partners such as Marie Bell. An actor with a pleasing physique, he played secondary roles in films, often not very rewarding, as troubled, self-interested characters or superficial, fickle lovers. He played Philippe de Nevers in André Hunebelle's Le Bossu in 1959, Danielle Darrieux's lover in Julien Duvivier's Le Diable et les Dix Commandements in 1962, Marina Vlady's lover in Christian-Jaque's Les Bonnes Causes and Dany Carrel's lover in André Cayatte's Piège pour Cendrillon in 1965. From the 1970s onwards, he only appeared in third roles, such as a bank clerk in Nicolas Gessner's La Petite Fille au bout du chemin in 1976. He specialized in dubbing, lending his voice to Tony Curtis, Elvis Presley and Gardner McKay in the TV series Aventures dans les îles, broadcast by Radiodiffusion-télévision française from February 11, 1961. Source: Article "Hubert Noël" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA.
1966
as Von Runstedt's Aide de Camp
1959
as Philippe de Nevers
1976
as Bank Clerk
1956
as Arrested gigolo (uncredited)
1962
as L'amant de Clarisse
1953
as Henri de Maleville
1982
as Lafayette
1959
as Michel Dolgorouki
1984
as Doctor at Nightclub
1956
as Un Passant
1951
as Un ami de Gaston
1961
as Récitant / Narrator (uncredited)
1981
as Gérald
1957
as Serge Lambert
1961
as Eric
1958
as Gérald Martin
1965
as Count Sinistre aka Armond du Moliere
1965
as François
1984
as Injured customer
1963
as Catherine Dupré's lover