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  1. Jean Delannoy (French pronunciation: [ʒɑ̃ dəlanwa]; 12 January 1908 – 18 June 2008) was a French actor, film editor, screenwriter and film director.

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0216381Jean Delannoy - IMDb

    Jean Delannoy. Director: God Needs Men. Jean Delannoy began his film career in the 1920s as an actor. By the 1930s he had switched careers and become an editor, then a short-subjects director.

  3. Jean Delannoy est un réalisateur et scénariste français, né le 12 janvier 1908 à Noisy-le-Sec (Seine-et-Oise) et mort le 18 juin 2008 à Guainville (Eure-et-Loir).

  4. Jun 20, 2008 · Jean Delannoy, a French director of lavish mid-20th-century film dramas whose reputation suffered after he was publicly reviled by proponents of the New Wave as the ultimate anti-auteur, died ...

  5. Jun 19, 2008 · Jean Delannoy, a French director of lavish mid-20th-century film dramas whose career plummeted after he was publicly reviled by proponents of the New Wave as the ultimate anti-auteur, died...

  6. Jean Delannoy. Director: God Needs Men. Jean Delannoy began his film career in the 1920s as an actor. By the 1930s he had switched careers and become an editor, then a short-subjects director.

  7. Jun 18, 2008 · Jean Delannoy (12 January 1908 – 18 June 2008) was a French actor, film editor, screenwriter and film director. Although Delannoy was born in a Paris suburb, his family was from Haute-Normandie in the north of France.

  8. “I’m the last survivor of one section of the history of French cinema,” director-screenwriter Jean Delannoy declared in 2004. The “last survivor” died yesterday, June 18, at his home in Guainville, in southwest France. He was 100.

  9. Jun 20, 2008 · Classic French filmmaker Jean Delannoy, who adapted novels by Victor Hugo and André Gide, and won the Cannes Film Festival's top prize in 1946, has died at age 100, officials said...

  10. Jun 20, 2008 · Classic French filmmaker Jean Delannoy, who adapted novels by Victor Hugo and Andre Gide and won the Cannes Film Festival’s top prize in 1946, died June 18 in Guainville, near Paris. He was 100.