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Betty Daussmond
French actress (1873–1957) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Betty Daussmond (29 July 1873 – 25 September 1957), born Marguerite Anne Bettina Doneau,[1] was a French stage and film actress, often associated with comedies and especially with the works of Sacha Guitry.
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Career
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Daussmond was born in Beaumont-sur-Sarthe, and prepared for a stage career at the conservatory in Nantes.[1]
In 1914 Daussmond played the leading female part in Georges Feydeau's last full-length farce, Je ne trompe pas mon mari!. The author commented that she brought "joie de vivre" to the role on "her pretty Columbine lips".[2] Also in 1914 she appeared in L'habit vert, another French farce, in London.[3][4] She was featured in the comedy La danseuse éperdue in 1920.[5]
Daussmond acted in works by Sacha Guitry on the London stage, including roles in L'illusioniste (1922), Jacqueline (1922), Comment on ecrit l'histoire (1923), and Le veilleur de nuit (1923).[6][7] Of her work in Le veilleur de nuit, a Daily Telegraph reviewer wrote, "The audience took her to their hearts, grateful for the many laughs with which she enlivened the evening."[8]
In 1933, she acted in an adaptation of the American play Dinner at Eight in Paris.[9] In 1935 she was again in a Guitry play in London, Mon double et ma Moite, at Daly's Theatre.[10] In 1939 she was in the cast of a radio production of Guitry's Les ruptures.[11] She acted in a play by Armand Salacrou, Si Dieu le voulait, in Paris in 1950.[12]
Daussmond's clothes, including gowns by Lanvin[13] and Maggy Rouff,[14] were photographed, described, and discussed in the fashion press.[15] When her stage costumes violated an exclusive agreement in 1922, the designer Patou sued Daussmond.[16] She endorsed Dentol, a brand of toothpaste, in print advertisements.[17]
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Selected filmography
- All for Love (1933)
- A Weak Woman (1933)
- Poliche (1934)
- Three Sailors (1934)
- The New Testament (1936)
- Woman of Malacca (1937)
- Cocoanut (1939)
- Indiscretions (1939)[18]
- White Paws (1949)[19]
- Three Women (1952)
- A Woman's Treasure (1953)
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External links
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