
Jean-Pierre Zola
Acting
Biography
No biography available for Jean-Pierre Zola.
Born: February 5, 1916
Place of Birth: Vienna, Austria-Hungary [now Austria]
Known For

Das Kriminalmuseum
Das Kriminalmuseum was a German television series. It ran from 1963 to 1970 on ZDF and was one of its first programs. Each episode began with a tracking shot through an unspecified crime museum, stopping at one of the displays, whose story was then told. Each episode was between 60 and 75 minutes long and featured different actors as the criminal commissioner. The best known was Erik Ode, who in 1969 moved to Der Kommissar, appearing in 97 episodes. The theme music of the series was written by German composer Martin Böttcher, who also composed the complete scores for five episodes.

The Sicilian Clan
An ambitious mobster plans an elaborate diamond heist while seducing the daughter-in-law of a ruthless mob patriarch as a determined police commissioner closes in on all of them.

The Train
As the Allied forces approach Paris in August 1944, German Colonel Von Waldheim is desperate to take all of France's greatest paintings to Germany. He manages to secure a train to transport the valuable art works even as the chaos of retreat descends upon them. The French resistance however wants to stop them from stealing their national treasures but have received orders from London that they are not to be destroyed. The station master, Labiche, is tasked with scheduling the train and making it all happen smoothly but he is also part of a dwindling group of resistance fighters tasked with preventing the theft. He and others stage an elaborate ruse to keep the train from ever leaving French territory.

Jacques Tati, tombé de la lune
The crazy rise and fall of Jacques Tati, comedy genius, actor, director and athlete of laughter. Or how the inventor of the mythical Mr. Hulot made France laugh, then the world, flying from success to success, rising higher and higher, until he came a little too close to the sun.

Mon Oncle
Genial, bumbling Monsieur Hulot loves his top-floor apartment in a grimy corner of the city, and cannot fathom why his sister's family has moved to the suburbs. Their house is an ultra-modern nightmare, which Hulot only visits for the sake of stealing away his rambunctious young nephew. Hulot's sister, however, wants to win him over to her new way of life, and conspires to set him up with a wife and job.

Conversation Piece
A retired professor of American origin lives a solitary life in a luxurious palazzo in Rome. He is confronted by a vulgar Italian marchesa and her lover, her daughter and her daughter's boyfriend, and forced to rent to them an apartment on the upper floor of his palazzo. From this point on his quiet routine is turned into chaos by his tenants' machinations, and everybody's life takes an unexpected but inevitable turn.

The Seventh Company Has Been Found
The second part of the Seventh Company adventures.

Any Number Can Win
Charles, fresh out of jail, rejects his wife's plan for a quiet life of bourgeois respectability. He enlists a former cell mate, Francis, to assist him in pulling off one final score, a carefully planned assault on the vault of a Cannes casino.

The Things of Life
The mind of Pierre Bérard, a successful middle-aged architect, is torn between his unstable present with Hélène, his younger lover, and his happy memories of the past with Catherine, his ex-wife; but his true destiny awaits him at a crossroads on his way to Rennes…

The Big Risk
Two men pull off a daring daylight payroll heist in Milan, making a fast getaway. One is returning to France after years in hiding, needing money to start fresh with his family.
Filmography
as Deserter Jacottet
as Brosch
as Mr. Lafleur
as L'officier allemand qui tente de loger Chaudard
as Dumpy Policeman
as Blanchard
as Herr Thalmeier
as Landlord (uncredited)
as Koch Armand
as Nicholas
as L'officier de police
as Desroches
as Colonel Muller
as Hélène's Father
as Nightclub client
as M. Wallach, le diamantaire (uncredited)
as Albert, bourgeois
as Employer
as Mustafa Faoud
as Evelyn's Party Guest (Uncredited)
as Jersey Prison Commandant
as Kioskbesitzer Boris
as Usurer
as Man in restaurant (uncredited)
as Cacherot
as Uncle
as Octave
as The director
as Annoyed diner (uncredited)
as Player (uncredited)
as Sponger
as Un représentant de sandales (uncredited)
as Mueller
as Pierre Concorde
as Public baths customer (uncredited)
as le caissier de la banque
as Le délégué civil (uncredited))
as (uncredited)
as Hotel director
as The manager of the cabaret
as Player at the casino (uncredited)
as Boss of the detective agency
as Bourderoux
as German officer
as Un réceptionniste de l'hôtel à Deauville (uncredited)
as (uncredited)
as Monsieur Arpel