Léopold Marchand
Léopold Marchand  | |
|---|---|
![]()  | |
| Born | 5 February 1891 | 
| Died | 25 November 1952  (aged 61) Paris, France  | 
| Occupation | Screenwriter | 
Léopold Marchand (1891-1952) was a French playwright and screenwriter. A number of his stage works were adapted into films.[1] In 1942 during the Vichy era his Jewish wife Misz Hertz committed suicide shortly before the Vel' d'Hiv Roundup.[2]
Selected filmography
- Fashions for Women (1927)
 - My Childish Father (1930)
 - Circulez! (1931)
 - The Nude Woman (1932)
 - Love Me Tonight (1932)
 - Topaze (1933)
 - We Are Not Children (1934)
 - The Fakir of the Grand Hotel (1934)
 - Fedora (1934)
 - Lucrezia Borgia (1935)
 - Samson (1936)
 - A Hen on a Wall (1936)
 - The Assault (1936)
 - Balthazar (1937)
 - Three Waltzes (1938)
 - Durand Jewellers (1938)
 - Mirages (1938)
 - Hangman's Noose (1940)
 - The Master Valet (1941)
 - Last Adventure (1942)
 - Business Is Business (1942)
 - Secret Documents (1945)
 - The Adventure of Cabassou (1946)
 - The Legend of Faust (1949)
 - Cartouche, King of Paris (1950)
 - My Childish Father (1953)
 
References
Bibliography
- Goble, Alan. The Complete Index to Literary Sources in Film. Walter de Gruyter, 1999.
 - Leteux, Christine. Continental Films: French Cinema under German Control. University of Wisconsin Press, 2022.
 
