
Jacques Balutin
Acting
Biography
Jacques Balutin is a French actor. Jacques Balutin was born on 29 June 1936 in Paris. His real name is William Buenos. He has acted in feature films, TV movies, short films, and as a voice actor. He is well renowned for being the French voice of detective David Starsky played by Paul Michael Glaser. Source: Article "Jacques Balutin" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA.
Born: June 29, 1936
Place of Birth: Paris, France
Known For

La Vénus de Milo

Les Sept de l'escalier 15

Drôle de couple

Unexpected
An English teacher seduces a young student in the company of his wife to help him in an ambitious plan with the kidnapping of a newborn baby of a wealthy businessman.

Commandant X

On a volé ma VF
Documentary on the French dubbing industry. A journey through pop culture, the power of voice, artificial intelligence... French dubbing actors of stars like Brad Pitt, Tobey Maguire, Daniel Craig, Woopy Goldberg or Morgane Freeman, the most talented and known in France tell the story of French dubbing through the strike that immobilized the country's industry and the breaking point between art and business. They also testify to the importance that dubbing has had, its scope and the future it will face with the evolution of artificial intelligence.

The Line
The series follows a group of Allied pilots who crashed in occupied territories during WWII. A network of civilians and Resistance fighters, "La Filière", is in charge of helping them pass from France to Spain so they can avoid capture.

Arsène Lupin
Arsène Lupin is a French TV show which was co-produced with German, Canadian, Belgian, Dutch, Swiss, Italian and Austrian TV stations. It was only loosely based on Maurice Leblancs novels. Georges Descrières' portrayal of Arsène Lupin showed more similarity to Graf Yoster than to Maurice Leblanc's original. He behaved in the first place as a perfect gentleman who never got angry. He was always relaxed, because whatever could possibly had bothered him in daily life was taken care of by his butler. It wasn't questioned how he had come to his financial independence although the series sometimes discreetly implied that he was a professional criminal. Besides rescuing damsels in distress Lupin took on criminals, competing with their wit and intelligence. Either he stole paintings from rich people who had to be considered white-collar criminals or he acted as a detective who derailed criminal schemes. However, when he was attacked, he could defend himself effortlessly by using elegant jujutsu methods. Among the guest stars were German actors such as Günter Strack and Sky du Mont. Jean-Paul Salomé said in his commentary on the DVD version of his film Arsène Lupin he had like this series as a child. German TV, one the investors, would broadcast the show eventually between 18:00-20:00 o'clock because it was only allowed to show commercials within that very timeslot. For them to get a financial return on investment the show had to be appropriate for families and also for children who would watch it alone. Subsequently it was nearby to ask to defuse and flatten some of Leblanc's plots in order to avoid possible complaints that could force the station to broadcast the show beyond the "Vorabendprogramm".

Les Rois de la comédie
At the end of the 1950s, four humor specialists simultaneously experienced recognition. Fernandel with “The Cow and the Prisoner”, Bourvil with “The Hunchback”, Jacques Tati with “My Uncle” and Louis de Funès with “Oscar” at the theater. On the big screen or on stage, each of these artists has a unique style of humor. They are the kings of French comedy. But how did they manage to become true box office champions? How did they experience their immense popularity? How do they still influence the comedy genre? And above all, are- are they funny in life? Where is the line between their character in the cinema and their real personality?

Call Me Mathilde
Mathilde de Blanzac is abducted on her way home from an evening at the opera with her wealthy industrialist husband. Her pathetic pieds-nickelés kidnappers begin by holding her hostage at the home of Petit Jean, a country bumpkin, before demanding a ransom from her husband. At the same time, Hubert de Pifre, a fighter pilot in distress, ejects over Petit Jean's farm.
Filmography
as Self (archive footage)
as Self (archive footage)
as Ted Lewis
as Pochet
as Bernard
as Bernard
as Richard (amant de Colette)
as Émile
as Self
as Franck Lequillard
as Marcel Heurtepont, président du club de foot
as Jacques
as Bertrand
as Le Taxi Raciste
as Arthur Pouvier
as Max Simon
as Self
as Self
as David
as Self
as William Dalton (voice)
as William Dalton (voice)
as Eugène Lalande
as Gilet, le chauffeur du camion
as Hubert McCormick
as Commissioner
as Pivot
as Self
as Jean Lescaut
as Fernand
as The mangy one
as Bob
as Brigadier
as Maxime
as Chappemain
as William Dalton (voice)
as Lucien Lenoir, prisonnier Français évadé
as Urbain
as L'inspecteur adjoint
as Larose
as Self
as Mabrouk (voice)
as Night train controller
as Clodion de Main-Hardye
as Gorin
as Luigi, le majordome de M. Foraz
as Fernand Zuccoli dit : "Milo". Souteneur de Laurence et Monique
as Lapige
as L'abbé Fénelon
as Eddy Brock
as Tunel
as Guard soldier
as Albérix
as Jacques Borgniol-Valchoze
as David Prosser
as William Dalton / Un parieur (voice)
as Béchoux
as Cheshire cat
as Paul Guisard
as Resistant gendarme
as Stuttering Reader (voice)
as Brigadier
as 'P'tit Louis'
as le chauffeur du taxi
as Inspector Pochet
as le photographe travaillant avec Delphine
as Max - le premier complice
as (voice)
as Staupitz
as Pierrot
as Lamenoise
as Mac Fish
as Fernand Zuccoli dit : "Milo". Souteneur de Laurence et Monique
as Eddy Brock
as Joseph Lippi
as Plampougnis
as Agent
as Etienne
as Lesueur
as Customs officer
as Fondane
as Reporter
as Richard, photographer
as Un chanteur de la troupe
as Gaspard
as Le moine Capucine
as Inspector Balutin
as Un spadassin (uncredited)
as Journalist (uncredited)
as The Lover
as L'ordonnance
as Le caporal Bourrache
as Norbert Gladieux