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Adèle Exarchopoulos
Adèle Exarchopoulos (2024).png
Exarchopoulos at the 2019 Cannes Film Festival
Born (1993-11-22) 22 November 1993 (age 31)
Paris, France
Nationality French
Occupation Actress
Years active 2006–present
Partner(s) Doums (2016–2017)
Children 1

Adèle Exarchopoulos (French pronunciation: [adɛl ɛɡzaʁkɔpulɔs]; born 22 November 1993) is a French actress. She had her career breakthrough starring as Adèle in the romance Blue Is the Warmest Colour (2013). At the 2013 Cannes Film Festival, she became the youngest person in the history of the festival to be awarded the Palme d'Or. She won it with her co-star Léa Seydoux.

Exarchopoulos won two César Awards for Blue is the Warmest Colour (2013) and All Your Faces (2023). She was also nominated for Cesars for her role in Mandibles (2020). Her other notables roles feature her in such films as Racer and the Jailbird (2017), The White Crow (2018), Sibyl (2019), The Five Devils (2022), and Passages (2023). She voiced Ennui in the Pixar animated film Inside Out 2 (2024).

Early life

Exarchopoulos grew up in the 19th arrondissement of Paris, near the Place des Fêtes. Her father, Didier Exarchopoulos, whose father was Greek, is a guitar teacher, and her mother, Marina Niquet, is a French nurse.

Career

2006–2012: Acting debut and early roles

Adèle Exarchopoulos Cannes 2013
Exarchopoulos at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival

In 2006, Exarchopoulos was spotted by an agent and made her first television appearance in an episode of the French police series R.I.S, police scientifique. At thirteen, she had a debuting film role in the 2007 film Boxes. She also appeared in the films Les Enfants de Timpelbach (2008), The Round Up (2010), Turk's Head (2010), Chez Gino (2011), Carré blanc (2011), Pieces of Me (2012), and I Used to Be Darker (2013).

2013–2019: Breakthrough and acclaim

She attracted international attention and critical acclaim for her performance in Blue Is the Warmest Colour, a 2013 film based on the 2010 French graphic novel of the same name. The film won the Palme d'Or at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival. Exarchopoulos and co-star Léa Seydoux were awarded the Palme d'Or alongside director Abdellatif Kechiche, becoming the only women apart from director Jane Campion to have won the award at the time; Exarchopoulos is the youngest person to ever receive the award. For her performance in Blue Is the Warmest Colour, she won the Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress, the César Award for Most Promising Actress, and the Trophée Chopard for Female Revelation of the Year, among dozens of other accolades.

Léa Seydoux Adèle Exarchopoulos Césars 2014
Exarchopoulos at the 39th César Awards with her Blue Is the Warmest Colour co-star Léa Seydoux

She received critical praise and her performance was cited as one of the year's best. Indiewire critic Eric Kohn stated that her performance was the best female performance of 2013. Her performance was praised for its "rawness." Critic A.O. Scott of The New York Times wrote that she gives a performance with "astonishing sensitivity" adding "Ms. Exarchopoulos almost never departs from the camera's scrutiny, and her reality, her ways of seeing and feeling, define the many shades of Blue." Justin Chang of Variety declared, "The picture belongs to Exarchopoulos, completely inhabiting a role aptly named after the thesp herself; with her husky voice and sweet, reluctant smile, she plays virtually every emotion a director can demand of an actress, commanding the viewer's attention and sympathy at every minute". Exarchopoulos discussed her process with The New York Times, explaining: "Abdellatif tried to keep us close to reality. He asked us to play with our own emotions. For example, I kept my own voice. It's very subtle, very delicate, the things that are a part of you and the things that are a part of your character".

In March 2014, she was in consideration to play Tiger Lily in the Joe Wright directed fantasy film Pan but lost to Rooney Mara. She portrayed Judith, an aspiring teacher in the period drama film Les Anarchistes. The film premiered at the 2015 Cannes Film Festival where Guy Lodge of Variety praised her chemistry with Tahar Rahim while also describing her performance as "attentive [and] quietly expressive." She then appeared in The Last Face alongside Javier Bardem and Charlize Theron, directed by Sean Penn, which premiered in competition for the Palme d'Or at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival. That same year she acted in the Arnaud des Pallières directed French drama Orphan opposite Adèle Haenel. The film premiered at the 2016 Toronto International Film Festival.

The following year she acted opposite Matthias Schoenaerts in the drama Racer and the Jailbird (2017), a film by Belgian film director Michaël R. Roskam. A.A. Dowd of The A.V. Club wrote, "[the film] taps into her magnetism: an underutilized fusion of glamour and ordinariness, holding the center of a film that feigns interest in character and story, when it's really all about the superficial pleasures". In 2018 she portrayed socialite Clara Saint opposite Oleg Ivenko as the ballet dancer Rudolf Nureyev in the biographical drama directed by Ralph Fiennes. In 2019 she starred in the Justine Triet directed comedy-drama Sibyl alongside Virginie Efira. The film premiered at the 2019 Cannes Film Festival where it competed for the Palme d'Or.

2020–present

In 2020 she starred in the comedy Mandibles directed by Quentin Dupieux. In an interview with iO Donna she stated her role was inspired by Greta Thunberg. The film premiered at the 77th Venice International Film Festival with The Hollywood Reporter describing her performance as being "both deadpan and cartoonishly over-the-top, like Tex Avery by way of David Lynch." She went on to earn a nomination for the César Award for Best Supporting Actress. She was nominated for the César Award for Best Actress. She then starred in the fantasy drama The Five Devils directed by Léa Mysius which had its world premiere in the Directors' Fortnight section of the 2022 Cannes Film Festival. Sophie Butcher of Empire described her as being "extraordinary" adding, "Her performance is one of taut physicality, balancing aloofness and vulnerability, and taps into more primal places".

In 2023, she acted in the Ira Sachs romance Passages opposite Franz Rogowski and Ben Wishaw. Sachs described her as a cross between Jeanne Moreau and Brigitte Bardot. Rex Reed of The Observer declared, "Dominated by three sensational performances, Passages invites obvious comparisons to Sunday Bloody Sunday, John Schlesinger's brilliant 1971 film". Film critic Kambole Campbell of Empire wrote, "Exarchopoulos imbues her character with conflicting senses of excitement and cautiousness". That same year she acted in the French drama All Your Faces directed by Jeanne Herry. For her performance she won the César Award for Best Supporting Actress. In 2024, she voiced Ennui in the Pixar animated film Inside Out 2. David Ehrlich of IndieWire wrote, "[Ennui] is voiced by a very amusing, very French Adèle Exarchopoulos, and is so blasé about everything that she operates the console from her phone on the couch".

Personal life

During Variety's 2013 Actresses Roundtable, Exarchopoulos expressed her frustration over losing a role that went to a "brown girl". She recalled that when a casting director told her that they preferred the "brown girl" after an audition, Exarchopoulos replied, "Yeah, but it's cinema, you can make me brown".

Exarchopoulos and actor Jérémie Laheurte began dating in 2012 during the filming of Blue Is the Warmest Colour, but they ended their relationship in 2015. In 2016, she began a relationship with French rapper Mamadou Coulibaly, known as Doums, member of French hip hop collective group L'entourage, with whom she had a son, born in 2017. They separated in 2017.

In June 2024, Exarchopolus signed a petition addressed to French President Emmanuel Macron demanding that France officially recognize the State of Palestine.

Filmography

Film

Film roles
Year Title Role Notes
2007 Boxes Lilli
2008 Les Enfants de Timpelbach Marianne
2010 The Round Up Anna Traube
Turk's Head Nina
2011 Chez Gino Maria Roma
Carré blanc Marie (young)
2012 Des morceaux de moi Erell
2013 Making a Scene The Woman Short film
I Used to Be Darker Camille
Blue Is the Warmest Colour Adèle
2014 Insecure Jenny
Voyage vers la mère Marie Louise
2015 Les Anarchistes Judith Lorillard
Apnée The Woman Short film
2016 Down by Love Anna Amari
The Last Face Ellen
Orphan Sandra
2017 Racer and the Jailbird Bibi Delhany
2018 The White Crow Clara Saint
2019 Sibyl Margot Vasilis
Back Home Mona
2020 Mandibles Agnès
The Stronghold Nora
2022 The Five Devils Joanne Soler
Smoking Causes Coughing Céline
2023 Elemental Ember Lumen (voice) French dub
Passages Agathe
All Your Faces Chloé Delarme
The Animal Kingdom Julia Izquierdo
A Real Job Meriem Bayan
Wingwomen Alex
All-Time High Herself Cameo
2024 Beating Hearts Jackie
Inside Out 2 Ennui (voice) English and French voice-over
Planet B Julia Bombarth
2025 Chien 51

Television

Television roles
Year Title Role Notes
2006 R.I.S, police scientifique Sarah 1 episode
2020 La Flamme Soraya Main role (7 episodes)
2022 Le Flambeau, les aventuriers de Chupacabra Main role (6 episodes)
2023 LOL: Qui rit, sort! Herself 7 episodes
2025 Too Much TBA

Theatre

Theatre roles
Year Title Director Venue Ref.
2019 La Trilogie de la vengeance Simon Stone Odéon-Théâtre de l'Europe

Awards and nominations

Award Year Category Work Result Ref.
Cannes Film Festival 2013 Palme d'Or (shared with Léa Seydoux and Abdellatif Kechiche) Blue Is the Warmest Colour Won
Chicago Film Critics Association 2013 Best Actress Nominated
Most Promising Performer Won
Detroit Film Critics Society 2013 Best Actress Nominated
Dublin Film Critics' Circle 2013 Best Actress Runner-up
Best Newcomer Won
Indiana Film Journalists Association 2013 Best Actress Won
IndieWire Critics Poll 2013 Best Lead Performance Runner-up
Los Angeles Film Critics Association 2013 Best Actress Won
National Board of Review 2013 Best Breakthrough Actress Won
New York Film Critics Circle 2013 Best Actress Runner-up
New York Film Critics Online 2013 Best Breakthrough Performance Won
Online Film Critics Society 2013 Best Actress Nominated
San Diego Film Critics Society 2013 Best Actress Nominated
San Francisco Bay Area Film Critics Circle 2013 Best Actress Nominated
Utah Film Critics Association 2013 Best Actress Won
Village Voice Film Poll 2013 Best Actress Won
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association 2013 Best Youth Performance Nominated
Central Ohio Film Critics Association 2014 Best Actress Won
Breakthrough Film Artist Won
César Awards 2014 César Award for Most Promising Actress Won
Lumières Awards 2014 Best Female Revelation Won
Critics' Choice Movie Awards 2014 Best Young Actor/Actress Won
Dorian Awards 2014 Best Actress Nominated
Rising Star of the Year Nominated
Empire Awards 2014 Best Female Newcomer Nominated
International Cinephile Society 2014 Best Actress Won
London Film Critics' Circle 2014 Actress of the Year Nominated
National Society of Film Critics 2014 Best Actress Runner-up
North Carolina Film Critics Association 2014 Best Actress Nominated
Online Film and Television Association 2014 Best Actress Nominated
Best Youth Performance Won
Best Female Breakthrough Nominated
Satellite Awards 2014 Best Actress in a Motion Picture Nominated
Santa Barbara International Film Festival 2014 Virtuosos Award Honored
Cannes Film Festival 2014 Trophée Chopard N/A Won
Ensor Awards 2018 Best Actress Racer and the Jailbird Nominated
César Awards 2022 Best Supporting Actress Mandibles Nominated
2024 Best Supporting Actress All Your Faces Won
Dublin Film Critics' Circle 2023 Best Actress Passages Nominated
Chlotrudis Society for Independent Films 2024 Best Performance in a Supporting Role Nominated

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Adèle Exarchopoulos para niños

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