
Acting · 69 years old
Paray-le-Monial, Saône-et-Loire, France
Jacqueline Jeanne Paule Maillan (11 January 1923 - 12 May 1992) was a French actress with a career spanning almost five decades, known primarily for her forty theatre productions, she also appeared in more than fifty films (1947 to 1992) and is remembered as one of the greatest comedic thespians of her generation and even nicknamed "The Louis de Funès in skirt". After working on the classics of French theatre, she excelled in playing exuberant, strong and powerful women in vaudeville and boulevard on stage or in such films as Jean-Marie Poiré's cult Gramps Is in the Resistance (French: Papy fait de la résistance,1983) before pioneering stand-up in France. Her husband Michel Emer, who was Edith Piaf's composer, helped her hide her bisexuality (if not her sole homosexuality) from the public as they lived as a 'free couple' when it was then deeply stigmatized during the 1950s and 1960s. She was made a Chevalier (French: Knight) of the Légion d'honneur and Officer of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. Source: Article "Jacqueline Maillan" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA.

Midi Première
Self

Lily et Lily
Lily et Déborah Dacosta

On purge bébé
Julie Follavoine

Le pont japonais
Sarah Jacoby

Call Me Mathilde
Mathilde de Blanzac

The Magnificent Tramp
Mme Marjorie

Gramps Is in the Resistance
Héléna Bourdelle dit « La Bourdelle »

Squeak-squeak
Cynthia Monestier, la femme de Léonard

Palace
Docteur Hélène Swift

Royal Affairs in Versailles
Visitor (uncredited)

Who Stole the Body?
Gin, English

Potiche
Suzanne Pujol

Champs-Elysées
Self

Candide or The Optimism in the 20th Century
Mrs. Jim, la mère puritaine

Folle Amanda
Amanda

Stars 90
Self

The Heirs
Chantal

The Grand Manoeuvre
Jeanne Duverger, sister of Victor

Pièce montée
Françoise Lumière

Comiques de toujours (Vol. 1 à 4)
Self (archive footage)