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Denise Pelletier

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Name
  
Denise Pelletier

Role
  
Actress

Siblings
  
Gilles Pelletier


Denise Pelletier httpswwwcollectionscanadagccaobj030001f1

Died
  
May 24, 1976, Montreal, Canada

Spouse
  
Emile Zarov (m. 1958–1976)

Movies
  
Night Cap, There's Always a Way to Find a Way

Parents
  
Marie-Reine Vaugeois, Albert Pelletier

Similar People
  
Gilles Pelletier, Denis Heroux, Andre Forcier

Marie denise pelletier tous les cris les sos


Denise Pelletier, OC (May 22, 1923 – May 24, 1976) was a Canadian actress.

Contents

Entrevue avec marie denise pelletier www elisabethparent com


Early life

Pelletier was born in 1923 in Saint-Jovite, Quebec to Albert Pelletier, a literary critic, and Marie-Reine Vaugeois. She had a brother, Gilles. She attended Congrégation Notre-Dame. After leaving school, Pelletier noticed an advertisement for acting courses offered by the Montreal Repertory Theatre, enrolled and was quickly given a part. At the theatre she performed in various classical plays, and also performed in some radio soap operas.

Film and television career

In 1943, Pelletier appeared in one of the first Québécois films, À la Croisée des Chemins. One of the few Canadian actors at the time performing in both English and French, she continued to wow audiences with titles such as the 1947 production of Les Parents terribles. In 1951 Pelletier met Jean Gascon at Théâtre du Nouveau Monde, who would go on to receive the Order of Canada. In 1952, television arrived in Canada and Pelletier jumped on the bandwagon, appearing in one of her most famous roles as Cécile in Les Plouffes.

Although she preferred the stage, Pelletier was crowned 'Miss Radio Television' in 1955 and starred opposite Jean Duceppe in De Neuf à Cinq in 1968. During the 1970s she also played in Mont-Joye and Michel Tremblay's Trois Petits Tours. In 1970, she was awarded the Order of Canada and performed in the Stratford Festival's show The Divine Sarah as her last performance in 1975.

Before the play could be performed in Montreal, Pelletier died during a heart operation on May 24, 1976, two days after her 53rd birthday.

Legacy

To celebrate her legacy, the Quebec government created the Prix Denise-Pelletier.

References

Denise Pelletier Wikipedia