
Line Noro
Known for department: Acting
Birthday: 1900-02-22 – 1985-11-04
Place of birth: Houdelaincourt, Meuse, Lorraine, France
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.
Known for

The Lost Village
1947Amélina Landrin
Mater Dolorosa
1933
A Man's Neck
1933La fille
The Land That Dies
1936Eléonore
Pépé le Moko
1937Inès, Pépé's mistress
Ramuntcho
1938Franchita
Vautrin the Thief
1943Asie
Faubourg Montmartre
1931Céline Gentilhomme
L'Assommoir
1933
Le Petit Jacques
1934Marthe RambertDernière heure
1934
The Flame
1936Cléo d'Aubigny
A Woman of No Importance
1937
L'ĂŽle des veuves
1937Madame Vandemaere
Street Without Joy
1938Marie Leichner
The Count of Monte Cristo Part 1 - The Prisoner of Kastell
1943La Carconte
The Secret of Madame Clapain
1943Madame Clapain
Ceux du rivage
1943Lucette
The Well-Digger's Daughter
1940Marie Mazel