General info : | | Suzanne Cloutier (born July 10, 1923 in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada – died December 2, 2003 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada (aged 80)) was a Canadian film actress.
Cloutier was the daughter and one of six children of Edmond Cloutier, the King's Printer for Canada in Ottawa, and Hélène Saint-Denis, who wed on May 23, 1922. She escaped an early unconsummated marriage to become an actress, first with Charles Laughton in New York and then the Comédie Française.
She appeared in films by Julien Duvivier and Marcel Carné, starred as Desdemona in Orson Welles' film version of Othello (1951) and appeared in Doctor in the House (1954, the hit of the year in Britain).
She had acted earlier in London in a play by Peter Ustinov, and the two married in 1954. They had three children, Andrea, Igor and Pavla, and Cloutier appeared in the film of his stage hit Romanoff and Juliet. The couple divorced in 1971, when Cloutier reconnected with Orson Welles, then at work on films never finished. Cloutier later resettled in Los Angeles, and eventually in Montreal, Canada, in 1988.
Cloutier died of liver cancer in Montreal on December 2, 2003, aged 80. | |
Contact info | | | |
Websites | | IMDb (www.imdb.com/name/nm0167235/) | |
Source : | | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suzanne_Cloutier (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suzanne_Cloutier) | |
Relations : | | Married to : Peter Ustinovm. 1954 - div. 1971 | |
Copied Wikipedia parts under license : | | Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported (CC BY-SA 3.0) | |
Copied Wikipedia parts under license : | Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported (CC BY-SA 3.0) | | |
Relations : | | : | |
Source : | | https://kolajmagazine.com/artistdirectory/suzanne-cloutier (kolajmagazine.com/artistdirectory/suzanne-cloutier) | |
Source : | | https://www.linkedin.com/in/suzanne-cloutier-47410815/?originalSubdomain=ca (www.linkedin.com/in/suzanne-cloutier-47410815/?originalSubdomain=ca) | |
Endpoint Description Field | | Set Decorator & Visual Artist | |
Video | Interview - Suzanne Cloutier | | |
Video | Othello - Orson Welles - Suzanne Cloutier - Micheál Mac Liammóir - 1951 - Trailer - 4K | | |
Image | Peter_Ustinov_with_family_1950s.jpg | | |
Video | SUZANNE CLOUTIER | | |
Source : | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suzanne_Cloutier (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suzanne_Cloutier) | | |
Relations : | Married to : Peter Ustinovm. 1954 - div. 1971 | | |
Video | | Suzanne Cloutier | Entrevue "Dialogique" du Prof. Norman Cornett | |
Image | | Suzanne Cloutier.jpg | |
General info : | Suzanne Cloutier (born July 10, 1923 in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada – died December 2, 2003 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada (aged 80)) was a Canadian film actress.
Cloutier was the daughter and one of six children of Edmond Cloutier, the King's Printer for Canada in Ottawa, and Hélène Saint-Denis, who wed on May 23, 1922. She escaped an early unconsummated marriage to become an actress, first with Charles Laughton in New York and then the Comédie Française.
She appeared in films by Julien Duvivier and Marcel Carné, starred as Desdemona in Orson Welles' film version of Othello (1951) and appeared in Doctor in the House (1954, the hit of the year in Britain).
She had acted earlier in London in a play by Peter Ustinov, and the two married in 1954. They had three children, Andrea, Igor and Pavla, and Cloutier appeared in the film of his stage hit Romanoff and Juliet. The couple divorced in 1971, when Cloutier reconnected with Orson Welles, then at work on films never finished. Cloutier later resettled in Los Angeles, and eventually in Montreal, Canada, in 1988.
Cloutier died of liver cancer in Montreal on December 2, 2003, aged 80. | Suzanne Cloutier (born in Montreal, Canada) is a Canadian set decorator and visual artist.
She has contributed to more than sixty Quebec and international productions, including Brooklyn (2015), Lucky Number Slevin (2006) and Luckiest Girl Alive (2022).
She also holds a degree in Painting and Drawing from Concordia University, and her paintings, drawings, and lithographs have been featured in solo and group exhibitions, primarily within Montréal’s maisons de la culture network and at artist-run centres throughout Quebec.
Her book Errances, published by Éditions du Passage, is her first published work.
Suzanne earned her Bachelor's degree in Art Painting and Drawing at Concordia University in 1989.
Suzanne Cloutier lives and works in Montréal, her hometown.
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