• Home

    Movies

  • Discover
  • Popular
  • Now Playing
  • Upcoming
  • Top Rated

    TV Shows

  • Discover
  • Popular
  • Airing Today
  • On The Air
  • Top Rated

    People

  • Popular

    Trending

  • Movies
  • TV Shows
    Armand Salacrou
    An image from Foolish Husbands, one of the productions that also features Armand Salacrou.
    Armand Salacrou

    Armand Salacrou

    August 9, 1899 — Rouen, Seine-Maritime, France

    Armand Camille Salacrou (9 August 1899 – 23 November 1989) was a French dramatist.

    He was born in Rouen, but spent most of his childhood at Le Havre, and moved to Paris in 1917. His first works show the influence of the Surrealists.

    He was the owner of a profitable advertising firm, but sold it in order to devote his time to writing plays. Encouraged by Charles Dullin, he wrote in a wide range of styles and enjoyed great success from the mid-1930s. His later work is usually grouped with that of the Existentialists. He flirted with communism during the 1920s and criticized capitalism in his play Boulevard Durand. During the Nazi occupation of France, he participated in the clandestine French resistance, an experience which he celebrated in Les Nuits de la colère.

    He was a member of the Académie Goncourt, and a library in his home town is named after him.

    Source: Article "Armand Salacrou" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.

    The Beauty of the Devil

    The Beauty of the Devil

    1950

    The Man from Nowhere

    The Man from Nowhere

    1937

    Monte Cristo

    Monte Cristo

    1929

    Foolish Husbands

    Foolish Husbands

    1941

    Monsieur Lenoir, who...

    Monsieur Lenoir, who...

    1983

    Histoire de rire

    Histoire de rire

    1982