
Jean-Claude Pascal
Acting
15
Movies
9
TV Shows
24
Credits
About
Jean-Claude Pascal (b. 24 October 1927 in Paris, France as Jean-Claude Villeminot. d. 5 May 1992) was a French singer. After surviving the Second World War in Straßburg, Pascal first studied at the Sorbonne-university and then turned to fashion-designing for Christian Dior. On his work for costumes for the theatre-play Don Juan he came into contact with acting and made his first cinema-movie in 1949 with Quattro rose rosse. Many movies should follow, among them La Belle et l'empereur ("Die schöne Lügnerin", 1959) (aside to Romy Schneider) or Angelique and the Sultan (Angélique et le sultan, 1968) aside to Michèle Mercier. Pascal won the 1961 Eurovision Song Contest for Luxembourg singing "Nous les amoureux" (We the lovers) with music composed by Jacques Datin and lyrics by Maurice Vidalin. He later represented Luxembourg again in the 1981 contest and finished 11th of 20 singing "C'est peut-être pas l'Amérique" (It may not be America) with words and music he composed along with Sophie Makhno and Jean-Claude Petit. Description above from the Wikipedia article Jean-Claude Pascal, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Jean-Claude Pascal
Acting
Jean-Claude Pascal (b. 24 October 1927 in Paris, France as Jean-Claude Villeminot. d. 5 May 1992) was a French singer. After surviving the Second World War in Straßburg, Pascal first studied at the Sorbonne-university and then turned to fashion-designing for Christian Dior. On his work for costumes for the theatre-play Don Juan he came into contact with acting and made his first cinema-movie in 1949 with Quattro rose rosse. Many movies should follow, among them La Belle et l'empereur ("Die schöne Lügnerin", 1959) (aside to Romy Schneider) or Angelique and the Sultan (Angélique et le sultan, 1968) aside to Michèle Mercier. Pascal won the 1961 Eurovision Song Contest for Luxembourg singing "Nous les amoureux" (We the lovers) with music composed by Jacques Datin and lyrics by Maurice Vidalin. He later represented Luxembourg again in the 1981 contest and finished 11th of 20 singing "C'est peut-être pas l'Amérique" (It may not be America) with words and music he composed along with Sophie Makhno and Jean-Claude Petit. Description above from the Wikipedia article Jean-Claude Pascal, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Champs-Elysées

Eurovision Song Contest

Midi Première

Les Rendez-vous du dimanche

Numéro un

Discorama

Music & Guests

Angelique and the Sultan

Caroline and the Rebels

Le Temps de vivre... Le Temps d'aimer

Untamable Angelique

The Poppy Is Also a Flower

Royal Affairs in Versailles

Die schöne Lügnerin

The Knight of the Night

A Caprice of Darling Caroline

Comment ne pas épouser un milliardaire

Alarm in Morocco

Lord Rogue

Guinguette

Rendezvous

They Were Five

Bad Liaisons

Perfectionist