
Maurice Chevit
Known For
Acting
Born
1923-10-31 in Paris, France
Died
2012-07-02
Biography
Maurice Chevit (31 October 1923 – 2 July 2012) was a French actor. Maurice Chevit made his theatrical début just after the Second World War, and made his first screen appearance in 1946 in René Clément's film Le Père tranquille. In August 1950, the Theatre de la Huchette in Paris presented Pepita ou Cinq cents francs de bonheur, a three-act comedy that Chevit co-wrote with Henri Fontenille; Chevit himself appeared in it, playing alongside Jacqueline Maillan, Pierre Mondy and Jacques Jouanneau. He was seen in many small film roles during the 1950s and 1960s, working with producers such as Henri Decoin and André Cayatte, but he was best known as a stage actor. Source: Article "Maurice Chevit" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Most Known For

Les Cinq Dernières Minutes
as Landry

Les Cinq Dernières Minutes
as Amédée

XXL
as David Stern

Graf Luckner
as Huitema

Asterix and Cleopatra
as (voice)

The Line
as Bellème, le sénateur

Without Leaving an Address
as Soldat dans la salle d'attente, gare de Lyon (uncredited)

Asterix the Gaul
as Claudius Catilus / le bourreau (voice)

Molière
as Le curé de l'école

Le Cid
as (voice)

Lettre ouverte
as The cafe owner (uncredited)

French Fried Vacation 2
as Marius Franceschini, Christiane's lover

The Hairdresser's Husband
as Ambroise Dupré dit Isidore Agopian

L'Huissier
as The tailor

Ridicule
as Le notaire

588 rue Paradis
as Nazareth

Love, Math and Sex
as Jean-Pierre

The Mask of the Gorilla
as Second hygiene inspector

Man on the Train
as Hairdresser

Famous Love Affairs
as un chevalier envoyé du Gurthenberg