
Élise Guilbault
Acting
Biography
Élise Guilbault (born April 8, 1961) is a Canadian film and television actress. She won the Genie Award for Best Actress for her role in the film The Woman Who Drinks (La Femme qui boit), and was a nominee for Cap Tourmente. She featured in the trilogy of Bernard Émond, playing a doctor in quest of faith and redemption in La Donation. Her television roles have included Les Hauts et les bas de Sophie Paquin, Le Coeur a ses raisons, Annie et ses hommes, Un gars, une fille and René Lévesque.
Born: April 8, 1961
Place of Birth: St-Lin des Laurentides, Québec, Canada
Known For

Sucré salé
Patrice Bélanger and his team are here to give Quebecers a little boost to their lives with this show where fun and pleasure prevail. With a front row seat to events happening across the province, the show is the reference for summer culture. Above and beyond the artists featured, the show puts our entire province in the spotlight.

Les bobos
Two bourgeois-bohemians struggle to stay on the cutting edge of trends and fashion while never sacrificing a single ounce of comfort, style or social conscience.

Le cœur a ses raisons
In the fictional city of Saint Andrews, Brett Montgomery, a wealthy cosmetics businessman and doctor at the local hospital, and Brad, his evil twin brother, battle for control of the Montgomery family fortune. Brett’s fiancée, Cricket, is a journalist with the local television station and has a twin sister, Ashley, who is a nurse at the hospital.

En thérapie
Philippe Jacob has acquired a reputation as the best psychologist in the city. And yet, at almost fifty, he finds himself facing a serious existential crisis. Can psychology really save the world? What if he’s wasted his life? Only a thin line lies between his own anxiety and that of his patients. It’s no surprise that at the end of the week, Philippe needs to go see his own psychologist with whom he maintains a serious love-hate relationship.

Yamaska
The lives of three families are forever changed by an unexpected death.

Un gars, une fille
Un gars, une fille is the title of a Quebec comedy television series created by Guy A. Lepage and broadcast on Radio-Canada, as well as the title of its French adaptation on France 2. It is one of the most successful Quebec television shows, with a concept exported to more than thirty markets around the world. It is the first Québécois television program to be adapted in the United States.

Mon fils

Grande Ourse

Ça décolle
Welcome to Superior Air! Buckle up, put your seat in the upright position, and get ready for the jokes to fly at 30,000 feet. Kim, Clara and Justin, our senior flight crew, will make sure that every flight is unforgettable. On each trip passengers of all ages, with their own stories, will board the plane for a destination.

Y'a du monde à messe
Public figures from different backgrounds meet each week. At first glance, these guests would seem to have little in common. However, something does unite them all: an event or experience that they have graciously agreed to share that justifies their seat at the same table. As the program unfolds, their shared history is gradually revealed.
Filmography
as Suzanne
as Monique Brodeur
as Soeur Monique
as Victoire Du Sault (60 ans)
as Esther
as Self - Guest
as Marielle
as Herself
as Diane Ricard / Tremblay
as Self - Guest of Honor
as Self
as Mimi Devline
as Self
as Self
as Self
as Self
as Self
as Monique Langevin
as Self
as Self
as Dominique Lévesque
as Self
as Camille Labit
as Agathe
as Marquise Létourneau
as Self
as Self
as Self
as Corinne Caron
as Self
as Self
as Amandine Rochon
as Véronique Côté
as Françoise
as Angelina Bossé
as Self
as Angie Caron
as Self
as Self
as Docteur Jeanne Dion
as Réjanne Gagné
as Self
as Self
as Self
as Estelle Poliquin
as Self
as Jeanne
as Britany Jenkins
as Blanche Von Trieck
as Maryse
as Self
as Self
as Paulette
as Albertine 40 ans
as Josiane Leblanc
as Élise
as Rental Agent (Segment "L'Individu")
as Femme en escarpins
as Femme aveugle
as Alfa O'Neil
as Ghislaine
as La mère
as Comédien supplémentaire
as Albertine Robitaille, mère d'Alice