Most Promising Young Actress

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Most Promising Young Actress
French: Meilleur espoir féminin
Directed by
TF1 Films Production
Distributed byUGC Fox Distribution
Release date
  • 31 May 2000 (2000-05-31)
Running time
100 min.
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench
Budget$7,4 million[1]
Box office$14.4 million

Most Promising Young Actress (French: Meilleur espoir féminin) is a 2000 French comedy film, directed and co-written by Gérard Jugnot.

Plot

Yvon Rance, hairdresser by vocation, in the small town of Cancale, have one student daughter Laetitia, he wants to make her a successful hairdresser. She would open a salon in Laval or Quimper. But Laetitia wants to make films, she secretly auditioned and was selected for the leading role. Not easy to break the news to her father who shows rather unpleasant and, as soon as he heard the news, trying by all means to prevent his daughter to make films. Yvon, which nevertheless wants happiness of his daughter, finally agrees to take her on location in Paris, but never stays away, always suspecting Stéphane Leroy, the writer and director of the film, to shoot with Laetitia disturbing sequences.

Cast

  • Gérard Jugnot as Yvon Rance
  • Bérénice Bejo as Laetitia Rance
  • Antoine Duléry as Stéphane Leroy
  • Chantal Lauby as Françoise
  • Hubert Saint-Macary as Loïck
  • Sabine Haudepin as Hélène
  • Didier Flamand as Belabre
  • Dora Doll as Madame Guiguan
  • Mohamed Hicham as Kader Achour
  • Daniel Martin as Michel
  • Philippe Beglia as Andrea
  • Sylvie Granotier as Claudia
  • Laurent Lebras as Cyril
  • Frédérique Meininger as Madame Pigrenez
  • Anne-Marie Jabraud as Madame Picot
  • Anna Gaylor as Madame Favart
  • Marie Mergey as Madame Le Cloarec
  • Thierry Obaïka as François
  • Élise Otzenberger as Julie
  • Arthur Jugnot as Alex
  • Patrice Juiff as Marco
  • Romain Thunin as Christophe
  • Justine Bruneau as Marie
  • Noémie Ringressi as Anna
  • Claire Chiron as Brigitte
  • Jean-Claude Bourlat as Ronald
  • Olivier Granier as Jean-Paul
  • Victoria Obermayer as Stéphanie

Cameo

Award

  • César Award for Most Promising Actress
    .

References

  1. ^ "Meilleur Espoir féminin (2000) - JPBox-Office".

External links