Line Noro
Biography
Aline Simone Noro, known as Line Noro, born February 22, 1900 in Houdelaincourt (Meuse) and died November 4, 1985 in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, is a French actress. Line Noro is the granddaughter of the communard couple Jean-Baptiste and Émilie Noro, originally from Lyon.
In the theatre, Line Noro has notably worked with Jacques Copeau, Charles Dullin and Louis Jouvet. For more than twenty years, she was a resident of the Comédie-Française (from 1945 to 1966). Actress of composition roles, also specializing in "weeping roles", she played in the cinema in about fifty films between 1928 and 1956, among which: "Pépé le Moko" by Julien Duvivier (1937), "Goupi Mains Rouges " by Jacques Becker (1943), "La Symphonie Pastorale" by Jean Delannoy (1946) or even "Meurtres?" by Richard Pottier (1950).
Line Noro was the wife of director André Berthomieu (died in 1960). Due to sight problems, she left the stage and the screens in the 1960s. She died in 1985 following a long illness.
Filmography
The Well-Digger's Daughter
as Marie Mazel 1940
It Happened at the Inn
as Marie des Goupi 1943
I Accuse
as Edith 1938
A Man's Neck
as La fille 1933
We Are All Murderers
as Madame Arnaud 1952
Pastoral Symphony
as Amelia Martens - his wife 1946
The Count of Monte Cristo Part 1 - The Prisoner of Kastell
as La Carconte 1943
Three Sinners
as Isabelle Annequin 1950
Justin de Marseille
as La Rougeole 1935
Inside a Girls' Dormitory
as Mlle Brigitte Tournesac 1953
Before the Deluge
as Madame Arnaud 1954
The Bride of Darkness
as Mlle Perdrières 1945
Vautrin the Thief
as Asie 1943
Behind These Walls
as Rosa Duroc 1946
The Lost Village
as Amélina Landrin 1947
Pivoine
1929