Anne Roumanoff
Anne Roumanoff | |
---|---|
Born | Paris, France | September 25, 1965
Alma mater | Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris |
Occupation | Comedian |
Anne Roumanoff (born 25 September 1965 in Paris) is a French comedian and actress.
Early life[]
Anne Roumanoff was born on 25 September 1965 in Paris, France. Her grandparents on one side were Ashkenazi Jews from Russia, and she has a grandmother from Morocco who was the granddaughter of Rabbi Haim Cohen of Fes.[1]
Roumanoff attended her first theater school at the age of 12. She graduated from the Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris.
Career[]
Roumanoff started her career in the television program La Classe on France 3, alongside Fabrice, Lagaf' and Jean-Marie Bigard in 1987. She became famous for her one-woman shows.
Roumanoff became part of the team of French TV show Rien à cirer on France Inter with Laurent Ruquier in 1991. In 1998, she celebrated her ten-year career at the Olympia.
In 2001, Roumanoff was the French voice of Coco la bouche in the animated feature Rugrats in Paris: The Movie. In 2003, her show Follement Roumanoff had a 13-month run at the Bobino Theater in Paris, then she started a tour in France and Quebec. In 2007, she celebrated her 20-year career with Anne a 20 ans at the Théâtre des Bouffes-Parisiens in Paris. From September 2007, she made a comic forum on the news, entitled On ne nous dit pas tout in the show Vivement Dimanche, hosted by Michel Drucker.[2]
Personal life[]
Roumanoff has a husband and two daughters, Alice and Marie.[3]
Filmography[]
Cinema[]
- 1989 : La Passion de Bernadette, by Jean Delannoy
- 1990 : Promotion canapé, by Didier Kaminka
- 1991 : Le Fils du Mékong, by François Leterrier
- 1992 : Une journée chez ma mère, by Dominique Cheminal
- 1995 : Golden Boy, by Jean Pierre Vergne
- 2000 : Rugrats in Paris, by Stig Bergqvist
TV films[]
- 1990 : Cavale, by Serge Meynard
- 1991 : Vacances au purgatoire, by Marc Simenon
- 1996 : Des mouettes dans la tête, by Bernard Malaterre
- 1996 : Le censeur du lycée d'Épinal, by Marc Rivière
- 1997 : Une patronne de charme, by Bernard Uzan
- 2000 : Sa mère la pute, by Brigitte Rouan
- 2005 : L'homme qui voulait passer à la télé, by Amar Arhab and Pascal Legitimus
- 2005 : La famille Zapon, by Amar Arhab
Bibliography[]
- Ca va être ta fête Maman !, Hors Collection, 2005, Paris (ISBN 978-2258067141)
- Le couple : Petits délices de la vie à deux, with Colette Roumanoff, Hors Collection, 2006, Paris (ISBN 978-2258070288)
- Belle, mince, sexy : Et puis quoi encore ?, Hors Collection, 2006, Paris (ISBN 978-2258072350)
- Portraits de femmes (et d'un homme), Fetjaine ed., Humour coll., 2007, Paris (ISBN 978-2354250324)
- On ne nous dit pas tout !, "Les chroniques de Radio Bistrot", Fetjaine ed., Humour coll., 2009, Paris (ISBN 978-2354251321)
Decorations[]
- Globe de Cristal for Best One Man Show (2008)
- Officer of the Order of Arts and Letters (2015)[4]
References[]
- ^ "MES ORIGINES JUIVES: Anne Roumanoff" (in French). Femininisrael.com. Retrieved 2011-01-13.
- ^ "Anne Romanoff, biographie" (in French). Evene. Retrieved 2009-07-02.
- ^ "Anne Roumanoff : actualités, biographie, vidéos et photos" (in French). News de Stars. Archived from the original on 2009-04-18. Retrieved 2009-07-02.
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-04-24. Retrieved 2016-01-14.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
External links[]
- (in French) Official site
- (in French) MySpace
- Anne Roumanoff at IMDb
- 1965 births
- Living people
- Writers from Paris
- Sciences Po alumni
- French humorists
- French stand-up comedians
- 20th-century French Jews
- Officiers of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres