Anne Roumanoff
Anne Roumanoff (born 25 September 1965 in Paris) is a French humorist and actress.
Career as humorist
At age 12, she attended her first theater school. After studying at the Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris, in the same class as Laurence Parisot, David Pujadas, Jean-François Cope, Frédéric Beigbeder and Isabelle Giordano, she began at 22, in 1987, in the TV broadcast La Classe on France 3, alongside Fabrice, Lagaf' and Jean-Marie Bigard. She became famous for her one-woman shows.
In 1991, Anne Roumanoff became part of the team of French TV show Rien à cirer on France Inter with Laurent Ruquier. In 1998, she celebrated her ten-year career at the Olympia.
In 2001, she was the French voice of Coco la bouche in the animated feature Rugrats in Paris: The Movie. In 2003, her show Follement Roumanoff had a 13-month run at the Bobino Theater in Paris, then she started a tour in France and Quebec. In 2007, she celebrated her 20-year career with Anne a 20 ans at the Théâtre des Bouffes-Parisiens in Paris. From September 2007, she made a comic forum on the news, entitled On ne nous dit pas tout in the show Vivement Dimanche, hosted by Michel Drucker.[1]
Personal life
She has a husband and two daughters, Alice and Marie.[2]
Her grandparents on one side were Ashkenazi Jews from Russia, and she has a grandmother from Morocco who was the granddaughter of Rabbi Haim Cohen of Fes.[3]
Filmography
Cinema
- 1989 : La Passion de Bernadette, by Jean Delannoy
- 1990 : Promotion canapé, by Didier Kaminka
- 1991 : Le Fils du Mékong, by François Leterrier
- 1992 : Une journée chez ma mère, by Dominique Cheminal
- 1995 : Golden Boy, by Jean Pierre Vergne
- 2000 : Rugrats in Paris, by Stig Bergqvist
TV films
- 1990 : Cavale, by Serge Meynard
- 1991 : Vacances au purgatoire, by Marc Simenon
- 1996 : Des mouettes dans la tête, by Bernard Malaterre
- 1996 : Le censeur du lycée d'Épinal, by Marc Rivière
- 1997 : Une patronne de charme, by Bernard Uzan
- 2000 : Sa mère la pute, by Brigitte Rouan
- 2005 : L'homme qui voulait passer à la télé, by Amar Arhab and Pascal Legitimus
- 2005 : La famille Zapon, by Amar Arhab
Bibliography
- Ca va être ta fête Maman !, Hors Collection, 2005, Paris (ISBN 978-2258067141)
- Le couple : Petits délices de la vie à deux, with Colette Roumanoff, Hors Collection, 2006, Paris (ISBN 978-2258070288)
- Belle, mince, sexy : Et puis quoi encore ?, Hors Collection, 2006, Paris (ISBN 978-2258072350)
- Portraits de femmes (et d'un homme), Fetjaine ed., Humour coll., 2007, Paris (ISBN 978-2354250324)
- On ne nous dit pas tout !, "Les chroniques de Radio Bistrot", Fetjaine ed., Humour coll., 2009, Paris (ISBN 978-2354251321)
Decorations
References
- ↑ "Anne Romanoff, biographie" (in French). Evene. Retrieved 2009-07-02.
- ↑ "Anne Roumanoff : actualités, biographie, vidéos et photos" (in French). News de Stars. Retrieved 2009-07-02.
- ↑ "MES ORIGINES JUIVES: Anne Roumanoff" (in French). Femininisrael.com. Retrieved 2011-01-13.
- ↑ http://www.culturecommunication.gouv.fr/Ministere/Services-rattaches-a-la-ministre/Section-des-distinctions-honorifiques/Arretes-de-Nominations-dans-l-ordre-des-Arts-et-des-Lettres/Nomination-dans-l-ordre-des-Arts-et-des-Lettres-juillet-2015
External links
- (French) Official site
- (French) MySpace
- Anne Roumanoff at the Internet Movie Database