
Bulle Ogier
Acting
Biography
Bulle Ogier (born Marie-France Thielland on 9 August 1939) is a French actress. Ogier's first appearance on screen was in Voilà l'Ordre, a short film directed by Jacques Baratier with a number of the then-emerging young singers of the 1960s in France, including Boris Vian, Claude Nougaro, etc. She worked with Jacques Rivette (L'Amour fou, Céline et Julie vont en bateau, Duelle, Le Pont du Nord, La Bande des Quatre), Luis Buñuel (Le charme discret de la bourgeoisie (The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie), René Allio, Claude Lelouch, Jean-Paul Civeyrac (All the Fine Promises Prix Jean Vigo), Claude Duty, Marguerite Duras, Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Barbet Schroeder, and others. Her daughter Pascale Ogier was also an actress, with a promising career that was cut short by her early death the day before her 26th birthday. Ogier is married to producer and director Barbet Schroeder. Description above from the Wikipedia article Bulle Ogier, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia
Born: August 9, 1939
Place of Birth: Boulogne-Billancourt, Seine [now Hauts-de-Seine], France
Known For

Out 1
Following the May 1968 civil unrest in France, two theater groups rehearse plays by Aeschylus while two solitary individuals wander the Parisian streets hustling the populace for cash.

Gold Flakes
Werner Schroeter's rhapsody of excess leaps from 1949 Cuba to contemporary France to points in between, while its feverishly shifting visual style evokes and parodies everything from kitschy Mexican telenovelas to silent French art films.

The secret files of Inspector Lavardin
The Dossiers of Inspector Lavardin is a French television series in four 90-minute episodes, created by Dominique Roulet and Claude Chabrol and broadcast between September 15, 1988 and February 1, 1990 on TF1. It follows the two films Chicken in Vinegar and Inspector Lavardin directed by Claude Chabrol and already featuring Jean Poiret in the role of Lavardin. This short series depicts the investigations of Inspector Lavardin, a tongue-in-cheek policeman known for his bad manners.

Pop' game
Poupée and her (so-called) brother Paulo share an apartment in Paris. They dream of becoming actors. In the meantime, life goes on, nothing happens, until Poupée meets François.

Vérités assassines
Véra Cabral, an emergency psychiatrist, is called in to help Giselle Leguerche, who has been incarcerated for murder. The inmate, who is about to be released and has no previous history of prison life, commits the irreparable act of murdering a female prison guard and taking an infant hostage. After resolving the situation, Véra Cabral is entrusted with the prisoner's psychiatric expertise. An investigation into Giselle Leguerche's past then begins, leading the psychiatrist down unexpected paths linked to the prisoner's past.

Lagardère
Lagardère is a French miniseries consisting of six 50-minute episodes, created by Marcel Jullian based on Paul Féval's novel Le Bossu (the eighth film adaptation outside of theater, out of 10 known adaptations), and some of the sequels imagined by Paul Féval Jr.1, directed by Jean-Pierre Decourt, and broadcast from September 20 to October 25, 1967, on the first channel of ORTF.

The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie
In Luis Buñuel’s deliciously satiric masterpiece, an upper-class sextet sits down to dinner but never eats, their attempts continually thwarted by a vaudevillian mixture of events both actual and imagined.

Out 1
While two theater groups rehearse plays by Aeschylus, two solitary individuals wander the Parisian streets hustling the populace for cash.

Et crac…!
A cuckolded husband is oblivious to his fed-up wife and her lover in this farcical menage à trois.

Bernadette Lafont: And God Created the Free Woman
A journey in the company of Bernadette Lafont, French Cinema’s most atypical actress. Tracing her career from pin-up girl, to New Wave model of sexual freedom, to drug-dealing granny in the film Paulette, by way of La Fiancée du Pirate and Les Stances à Sophie, this film pays tribute to her extraordinary life and artistic odyssey. Her grand-daughters, Anna, Juliette and Solène, revisit the dreams of Bernadette, in the family home in the Cevennes region where they, like her, grew up. Her close friends, Bulle Ogier and Jean-Pierre Kalfon, reminisce on their artistic and human complicity. Throughout the film, Bernadette Lafont in person, with her inimitable character actress voice, re-evokes a life in cinema marked with insolence, courage and freedom.
Filmography
as Self (archive footage)
as Nelly
as Delphine Souriceau
as Lucie Fisher
as Petite voix bouddhiste (voice)
as Madame Argante
as Louise, la mère de Marie
as Blanche Rey
as Katel Meyer
as Florelle
as Catherine
as The mother
as Lucie
as Bulle Ogier
as Doña Inês
as Self
as Self
as Madeleine
as Geneviève Bellinsky
as Mme Markovitch
as Princess de Blamont-Chauvry
as Séverine Serizy
as Angèle
as Claude Sabrié
as Odile De Castellane
as Beatrice
as Rose
as Anna
as Laurence's Mother
as Madame Nadine, la patronne
as Évelyne Bordier
as Mrs. Ford
as La dame du cimetière
as Mireille
as Benoit's Mother
as Jeanne
as Katia
as Self
as Louise
as Françoise
as Madeleine Béjart
as The mother
as Pauline / Emilie
as Self - Actor
as Joa
as Constance
as Laure Pincemaille
as Cornelia
as Self
as Genia
as Actrice n° 1
as Apolline
as Suzie
as Mademoiselle Betty
as Mlle Tita
as Marie
as Geneviève Derhode
as Jeanne
as Agatha
as Lucienne
as Narrator
as Pascale the clerk
as Various Roles (voice)
as Hilde Krieger
as Marcelle
as Ariane
as Viva
as Murderous soul
as Claire
as Ariane
as Marguerite, Morins tidligere kone
as Self
as Janine
as Camille
as Countess Palewski
as Camille
as Marie, the singer
as Irene
as Pauline/Emilie
as Marie Dorval
as Coffee student
as Liliane Guerec Nodier
as Florence
as Vivian
as Odile
as Rosemonde
as Pauline / Emilie
as Julia
as La seconde voleuse
as Paulina
as Pauline
as Martine
as Claire
as Marie
as 'Gigi la Folle'
as Mariquita
as La chanteuse du cabaret (uncredited)
as Mariquita