Anne Wiazemsky
Princess Anne Wiazemsky (14 May 1947 - 5 October 2017) was a French actress, of the Russian Rurikid family of Princes Vyazemsky-Counts Levashov. Through her mother, she is the granddaughter of François Mauriac. She appeared in Robert Bresson's Au hasard Balthazar (1966) and in Godard's films La Chinoise (1967) and Week End (1967). She was married to Jean-Luc Godard between 1967 and 1979; they divorced. Wiazemsky is also an author. She has written several novels: Canines (1993), Une Poignée de Gens, Aux Quatre Coins du Monde and Hymnes à l’Amour (1996). The 2003 film All the Fine Promises, directed by Jean-Paul Civeyrac and starring Valérie Crunchant and Bulle Ogier, is based on Hymnes à l'Amour. Her 2007 novel, Jeune Fille, is based on her experience starring in Au hasard Balthazar at the age of 18. Description above from the Wikipedia article Anne Wiazemsky, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Known For
Credits
- 2023 · Godard Cinema as Self (archive footage )
- 2023 · Godard by Godard as Self (archive footage)
- 2010 · Memória Cubana as Self (archive footage)
- 2004 · Les anges 1943, histoire d'un film as Self (voice)
- 1988 · Ville étrangère as Stéphanie
- 1988 · Le Testament d'un poète juif assassiné as Raissa Kossover
- 1986 · Qui trop embrasse... as Nathalie
- 1985 · She Spent So Many Hours Under the Sun Lamps as Christa
- 1985 · Rendez-vous as Administrator
- 1983 · L'hôpital de Leningrad as Liouba
- 1983 · Frogs as Nora
- 1981 · Be Pretty and Shut Up! as Self
- 1980 · Même les mômes ont du vague à l'âme as Photographer
- 1980 · The Imprint of Giants as La Marraine
- 1979 · The Secret Child as Elie
- 1978 · Flesh Color as
- 1978 · La Passion as Véronique
- 1978 · Civil Wars in France as Elisabeth Dimitrieff (segment "La semaine sanglante")
- 1977 · My Heart Is Red as Calderon
- 1976 · 30 millions d'amis as Self
- 1975 · The Extradition as Nathalie Herzen
- 1975 · Apostrophes as Self
- 1974 · The Truth About the Imaginary Passion of an Unknown as Le Christ-femme
- 1973 · The Last Train as Anna Maroyeur
- 1973 · George Who? as George Sand
- 1973 · Return from Africa as Anne, la postière
- 1972 · The Big Departure as Mona Lisa
- 1972 · Tout Va Bien as Leftist Woman
- 1971 · L'inchiesta as
- 1971 · Struggle in Italy as Store Clerk (uncredited)
- 1971 · Vladimir and Rosa as Ann / Women's Liberation Militant (uncredited)
- 1971 · Raphael or the Debauched One as Diane
- 1970 · Wind from the East as La Révolutionnaire (uncredited)
- 1969 · Capricci as Manon
- 1969 · The Seed of Man as Dora
- 1969 · Pigsty as Ida
- 1969 · Les Gauloises bleues as L'infirmière
- 1969 · Les vieilles lunes as
- 1969 · Voices as Self
- 1968 · Sympathy for the Devil as Eve Democracy
- 1968 · One to One: Jean-Luc Godard Speaks as Herself
- 1968 · Bonnot's Gang as La Vénus rouge
- 1968 · Theorem as Odetta, the Daughter
- 1967 · Weekend as Une Fille à la Ferme (uncredited)
- 1967 · La Chinoise as Véronique
- 1967 · Lamiel as Tessa d'Angoulême
- 1966 · Au Hasard Balthazar as Marie
- 1966 · Un metteur en ordre: Robert Bresson as Self