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Marion Cotillard
Marion Cotillard at 2019 Cannes.jpg
Cotillard in 2019
Born (1975-09-30) 30 September 1975 (age 49)
Paris, France
Other names Simone
Alma mater Conservatoire d'art dramatique d'Orléans [fr]
Occupation
  • Actress
  • singer
  • environmentalist
Years active 1982–present
Partner(s) Guillaume Canet (2007–present)
Children 2
Parent(s)
  • Niseema Theillaud (mother)
Awards Full list

Marion Cotillard (French: [maʁjɔ̃ kɔtijaʁ] ; born 30 September 1975) is a French actress. Known for her roles in independent films and blockbusters in both European and Hollywood productions, she has received various accolades, including an Academy Award, a British Academy Film Award, a Golden Globe Award, an European Film Award, a Lumières Award and two César Awards. She became a Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters in France in 2010, and was promoted to Officer in 2016, the same year she was named a Knight of the Legion of Honour. She has served as a spokeswoman for Greenpeace since 2001. She was the face of the Lady Dior handbag for nine years, and since 2020 she is the face of the fragrance Chanel No. 5.

Cotillard started acting as a child in theatre and in TV films. She had her first English-language role in the TV series Highlander (1993), and made her feature film debut in The Story of a Boy Who Wanted to Be Kissed (1994). Her breakthrough came in the successful French film Taxi (1998), which earned her a César Award nomination for Most Promising Actress. She made her Hollywood debut in Big Fish (2003), and won her first César Award for Best Supporting Actress for A Very Long Engagement (2004). She had her major English-language role up to that point in A Good Year (2006).

For her portrayal of French singer Édith Piaf in La Vie en Rose (2007), Cotillard won her second César Award, a BAFTA Award, a Golden Globe Award, a Lumières Award and the Academy Award for Best Actress, becoming the first and (as of 2023) only actor to win an Academy Award for a French-language performance, and also the second actress to have won this award for a non-English language performance. She earned several critics' awards for The Immigrant (2013) and Two Days, One Night (2014), three more Golden Globe nominations for Nine (2009), Rust and Bone (2012), and Annette (2021), and received a second Academy Award nomination for Best Actress for Two Days, One Night in 2015, her second nomination for a French-language film, becoming one of only seven actors to receive multiple Academy Award nominations for non-English language performances. She has continued to star in major English-language films such as Public Enemies (2009), Inception (2010), Contagion (2011), Midnight in Paris (2011), The Dark Knight Rises (2012), Macbeth (2015), Allied (2016), Annette (2021), and Lee (2023).

Cotillard has played Joan of Arc on stage in several countries between 2005 and 2022 in the oratorio Joan of Arc at the Stake. She has narrated several documentaries and provided voice acting for the animated films The Little Prince (2015), April and the Extraordinary World (2015), the French version of Minions (2015), Charlotte (2021), and The Inventor (2023). Her other notable French, Belgian and Canadian films include La Belle Verte (1996), Pretty Things (2001), Love Me If You Dare (2003), Dikkenek (2006), Little White Lies (2010), and It's Only the End of the World (2016).

Early life

Cotillard was born on 30 September 1975 in Paris and grew up around Orléans in an artistically inclined household. Her father, Jean-Claude Cotillard, is an actor, teacher, former mime, and theatre director, of Breton descent. Cotillard's mother, Monique Niseema Theillaud, is an actress and drama teacher of Algerian Kabyle background. She has two younger twin brothers, Quentin and Guillaume. Cotillard's father introduced her to cinema, and as a child she would mimic Louise Brooks and Greta Garbo in her own bedroom. She began acting during her childhood, appearing in one of her father's plays.

At the age of 15, Cotillard entered the Conservatoire d'art dramatique in Orléans. She graduated in 1994 and then moved to Paris to pursue an acting career.

Acting career

Early work in France and transition to Hollywood (1982–2006)

In 1982, at the age of 7, Cotillard made her on-screen debut in the short film Le monde des tout-petits, directed by Claude Cailloux and broadcast by the French TV channel TF1. The following year, she appeared in another TV short film for TF1, Lucie, also directed by Cailloux.

After small appearances and performances in theatre, Cotillard had occasional, minor roles in television series such as Highlander in 1993, where she had her first English-speaking role aged 17. Her career as a film actress began in the mid-1990s, with minor roles in Philippe Harel's The Story of a Boy Who Wanted to Be Kissed (1994), which was her feature film debut at the age of 18, and in Coline Serreau's La Belle Verte released in 1996. Also in 1996, she had her first leading role in the television film Chloé, directed by Dennis Berry and opposite Anna Karina, with Cotillard starring as a teenage runaway.

In 1998, she appeared in Gérard Pirès' action comedy Taxi, playing Lilly Bertineau, the girlfriend of delivery boy Daniel, played by Samy Naceri. The film was a box office hit in France with over 6 millions tickets sold, and Cotillard was nominated for a César Award for Most Promising Actress. She reprised the role in Taxi 2 (2000) and Taxi 3 (2003).

Marion Cotillard Studio Harcourt 1999 (without signature)
Cotillard in 1999

In 1999, Cotillard ventured into science fiction with Alexandre Aja's post-apocalyptic romantic drama Furia. That same year, she also starred in Francis Reusser's Swiss war drama film War in the Highlands (La Guerre dans le Haut Pays), for which she won the Best Actress Award at the 1999 Autrans Mountain Film Festival. In 2001, she appeared in Pierre Grimblat's romantic war drama film Lisa, playing the title role and younger version of Jeanne Moreau's character, alongside Benoît Magimel and Sagamore Stévenin. She also starred in Gilles Paquet-Brenner's drama film Pretty Things (Les Jolies Choses), adapted from the work of feminist writer Virginie Despentes, portraying twins of completely opposite characters, Lucie and Marie. Her performance in Pretty Things earned her a second César Award nomination for Most Promising Actress. In 2002, Cotillard starred in Guillaume Nicloux's thriller A Private Affair (Une Affaire Privée), in which she portrayed the mysterious Clarisse.

Cotillard started the transition into Hollywood when she obtained a supporting role in Tim Burton's 2003 fantasy comedy-drama film Big Fish, in which she played Joséphine, the French wife of Billy Crudup's character, William Bloom. The production, her first English-language film, allowed her to work with well-established actors such as Helena Bonham Carter, Albert Finney, Ewan McGregor, Jessica Lange and Allison Lohman. Big Fish was a critical and commercial success, and marked a turn in Cotillard's career, who was unhappy with her career in France at the time for not getting good roles, and considered taking some time off until she got the role in Big Fish. She next starred in Yann Samuell's 2003 French romantic comedy film Love Me If You Dare (Jeux d'enfants), as Sophie Kowalsky, the daughter of Polish immigrants. The film was a box office hit in France with over 1 million tickets sold.

In 2004, she won the Chopard Trophy of Female Revelation at the Cannes Film Festival, narrated the children's audio book Cinq Contes Musicaux Pour les Petits ("Five Musical Tales For the Little Ones") by Isabelle Aboulker, and had supporting roles in Jean-Pierre Jeunet's A Very Long Engagement (Un Long Dimanche de Fiançailles), as Tina Lombardi, for which she won a César Award for Best Supporting Actress, and in Lucile Hadžihalilović's mystery thriller Innocence as Mademoiselle Éva; both films were acclaimed by critics.

In 2005, Cotillard starred in six films: Steve Suissa's Cavalcade, Abel Ferrara's Mary, Richard Berry's The Black Box (La Boîte Noire); Rémi Bezançon's Love Is in the Air (Ma vie en l'air), Fabienne Godet's Burnt Out (Sauf le respect que je vous dois), and Stéphan Guérin-Tillié's Edy.

In May 2005, Cotillard portrayed Joan of Arc for the first time in the Orléans Symphonic Orchestra's production of Arthur Honegger's oratorio Joan of Arc at the Stake at the Palais des Sports d'Orléans, in Orléans, France. She reprised the role several times when performing the oratorio in different countries in the following years.

In 2006, the actress took on significant roles in four feature films, including Ridley Scott's romantic dramedy A Good Year, in which she had her major English-language role up to that point, Fanny Chenal, a French café owner in a small Provençal town, opposite Russell Crowe as a Londoner who inherits a local property. She played Nadine in the Belgian comedy Dikkenek, alongside Mélanie Laurent, and the role of Nicole in Fair Play. She also played Léna in the satirical coming-of-age film Toi et moi, directed by Julie Lopes-Curval, for which she learned how to play the cello for her role.

La Vie en Rose and worldwide recognition (2007–2010)

Marion Cotillard (Berlin Film Festival 2007)
Cotillard attending an event for La Vie en Rose at the 2007 Berlin International Film Festival

Cotillard was chosen by director Olivier Dahan to star as French singer Édith Piaf in his biographical film La Vie en Rose before he had even met the actress, after he noticed a similarity between Piaf's and Cotillard's eyes. It was dubbed "the most awaited film of 2007" in France, where some critics said Cotillard had reincarnated Édith Piaf to sing one last time on stage. During the film's premiere at the 2007 Berlin International Film Festival, Cotillard was in attendance and received a 15-minute standing ovation. Hollywood talent agent Hylda Queally signed Cotillard shortly after the premiere at the festival. La Vie en Rose was a box office hit in France, with more than 5 million admissions, and made US$86 million worldwide on a US$25 million budget.

Cotillard became the first actress to win a Golden Globe for a non-English language performance since 1972 (when Liv Ullmann won for The Emigrants), and also the first person ever to win a Golden Globe for a (Comedy or Musical) non-English language performance. On 10 February 2008, Cotillard became the first French actress since Stéphane Audran in 1973 to be awarded the BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role. At the Academy Awards, she won Best Actress, becoming the first woman and second person (after Adrien Brody in The Pianist six years earlier) to win both a César and an Oscar for the same performance. Cotillard is the second French actress to win this award, and the third overall to win an Oscar, after Simone Signoret in 1960 and Juliette Binoche in 1997. She is the first Best Actress Oscar winner for a non-English language performance since Sophia Loren in 1961. She is also the first and (as of 2023) only winner of an Academy Award for a French-language performance. On 24 June 2008, Cotillard was one of 105 individuals invited to join the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

Following her Oscar win, Cotillard continued her Hollywood career and starred alongside Johnny Depp and Christian Bale in the role of Billie Frechette in Michael Mann's Public Enemies, released in the United States on 1 July 2009. Later that year, she appeared in Rob Marshall's film adaptation of Nine, the musical based on the 1963 Federico Fellini film . As Luisa Contini, the wife of Guido (Daniel Day-Lewis), Cotillard performed two musical numbers: "My Husband Makes Movies" and "Take It All." Time magazine ranked her performance in Nine as the fifth best female performance of 2009, behind Mo'Nique, Carey Mulligan, Saoirse Ronan and Meryl Streep. She won the Desert Palm Achievement Actress Award at the 2010 Palm Springs International Film Festival – her second prize from the festival – and was nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy for her work in Nine. Cotillard appeared on the cover of the November 2009 issue of Vogue with her Nine co-stars, and on the magazine's July 2010 cover by herself.

Cotillard was the Honorary President of the 35th César Awards ceremony, held on 27 February 2010. She played Mal Cobb, a projection of Dom Cobb (Leonardo DiCaprio)'s deceased wife, in Christopher Nolan's film Inception, released on 16 July 2010. Nolan described Mal as "the essence of the femme fatale", and DiCaprio praised Cotillard, saying "she can be strong and vulnerable and hopeful and heartbreaking all in the same moment, which was perfect for all the contradictions of her character." The film made US$825 million in worldwide box-office receipts, and Cotillard and DiCaprio's pairing in Inception ranked eighth on the Forbes list of "Hollywood's Top Earning On-Screen Couples." That same year, she also starred as Marie, an environmentalist, in Guillaume Canet's drama Little White Lies (Les petits mouchoirs).

Established actress and continued acclaim (2011–2015)

In 2011, Cotillard co-starred in Woody Allen's Midnight in Paris as Pablo Picasso's fictionalized mistress, Adriana, with whom Owen Wilson's character, Gil, falls in love. The film grossed $151 million worldwide on a $17 million budget. That same year, she also appeared alongside Kate Winslet, Jude Law, Gwyneth Paltrow and Matt Damon in Steven Soderbergh's thriller Contagion; and had the top rank on Le Figaro's 2011 list of the highest-paid French actors of 2010, the first time in nine years that a female had topped the list. She also tied with Kate Winslet as the highest-paid foreign actress in Hollywood. In 2012, Cotillard was ranked ninth on the list of the highest-paid French actresses in 2011, and portrayed Miranda Tate (alongside her Public Enemies co-star Christian Bale) in Christopher Nolan's Batman feature The Dark Knight Rises.

Cotillard next portrayed an orca trainer who loses her legs after a work accident in Jacques Audiard's romantic drama Rust and Bone (De rouille et d'os), costarring Matthias Schoenaerts. The film premiered in the main competition at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival and received a 10-minute standing ovation at the end of its screening. Cotillard received rave reviews for her performance, and Cate Blanchett wrote an op-ed for Variety describing the film as "simply astonishing" and stating that "Marion has created a character of nobility and candour, seamlessly melding herself into a world we could not have known without her. Her performance is as unexpected and as unsentimental and raw as the film itself." She earned a fifth César Award nomination, a fourth Screen Actors Guild Award nomination, a third Golden Globe nomination (her first for Best Actress – Drama), and her second Critics' Choice Award and Lumières Award nominations. James Kaelan of MovieMaker magazine wrote that it was a travesty that Cotillard was not nominated for an Academy Award for Rust and Bone. Cotillard also received several other honors and career tributes in 2012, at the Telluride Film Festival, Hollywood Film Festival, AFI Fest, Gotham Awards, and Harper's Bazaar Awards.

In 2013, Cotillard was named Woman of the Year by Harvard's student society Hasty Pudding Theatricals, and Le Figaro also ranked her the second highest-paid actress in France in 2012 and the seventh highest-paid actor overall. In May 2013, she appeared with Gary Oldman, her co-star in The Dark Knight Rises, in the controversial music video for "The Next Day" by David Bowie.

Cotillard had her first leading role in an American movie in James Gray's The Immigrant as Polish-born Ewa Cybulska, who emigrates hoping to experience the American dream in 1920s New York. James Gray wrote the script especially for Cotillard after meeting her at a French restaurant with her boyfriend. Cotillard had to learn 20 pages of Polish dialogue for her role, and Gray stated that she is the best actor he's ever worked with. Her performance was widely acclaimed, and she was awarded the New York Film Critics Circle Award, the National Society of Film Critics Award, the Toronto Film Critics Association Award and was nominated for an Independent Spirit Award for Best Actress in 2015. She starred in Guillaume Canet's Blood Ties in 2013 with Clive Owen, Billy Crudup and her Rust and Bone co-star Matthias Schoenaerts; and had a cameo in Adam McKay's comedy film Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues, acting opposite Jim Carrey in the battle scene between rival news teams. In December 2013, Cotillard was a member of the 13th Marrakech Film Festival jury presided by Martin Scorsese.

Marion Cotillard Cannes 2015
Cotillard attending an event for Macbeth at the 2015 Cannes Film Festival

In 2014, she starred in the Dardenne brothers drama Two Days, One Night (Deux jours, une nuit), as Sandra, a Belgian factory worker who has just one weekend to convince her co-workers to give up their bonuses so that she can keep her job. The film premiered in the main competition at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival and earned a 15-minute standing ovation, with Cotillard's performance praised as "a career-high performance", and favored to win the festival's Best Actress prize, which ended up going to Julianne Moore for Maps to the Stars. Several critics' awards followed, as well as a European Film Award for Best Actress, a second Academy Award nomination, making Cotillard the first actor to be nominated for a Belgian film, and a sixth César Award nomination. Her performances in both The Immigrant and Two Days, One Night shared the fourth spot on Time's list of Best Movie Performances of 2014. In November 2014, Cotillard participated on Comedy Central's All-Star Non-Denominational Christmas Special, in a duet with Nathan Fielder on the Elvis Presley song "Can't Help Falling in Love".

In 2015, Cotillard took on the role of Lady Macbeth in a film adaptation of William Shakespeare's play, directed by Justin Kurzel and starring Michael Fassbender in the title role. The film premiered at the Cannes Film Festival and Cotillard's performance earned her a nomination for the British Independent Film Award for Best Actress, and high praise from critics, particularly for her "Out, Damned Spot" monologue. Variety critic Guy Lodge remarked: "Her deathless sleepwalking scene, staged in minimalist fashion under a gauze of snowflakes in a bare chapel, is played with tender, desolate exhaustion; it deserves to be viewed as near-definitive." That same year, she starred in the New York Philharmonic's production of Arthur Honegger's oratorio Joan of Arc at the Stake, and voiced the roles of The Rose in both the English and French versions of Mark Osborne's The Little Prince, Scarlet Overkill in the French version of Minions; and April, the title character in the French-Canadian-Belgian 3D animated film April and the Extraordinary World (Avril et le Monde Truqué).

Return to French cinema (2016–present)

In 2016, Cotillard played Gabrielle, a free-spirited woman in a convenience marriage in Nicole Garcia's romantic drama From the Land of the Moon (Mal de Pierres), an adaptation of the bestselling Italian novel Mal di Pietre by Milena Agus, which marked her return to French cinema after 2012's Rust and Bone, and earned her a seventh César Award nomination. She also played the role of Catherine, the sister-in-law of a gay playwright (portrayed by Gaspard Ulliel), who returns home to tell his family that he is dying in Xavier Dolan's Canadian-French co-production It's Only the End of the World (Juste la fin du Monde). Both films premiered in main competition at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival, to polarized reactions from critics. It's Only the End of the World was a box office hit in France with over 1 million tickets sold.

Marion Cotillard Cannes 2016
Cotillard attending an event for From the Land of the Moon at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival

In 2016, Cotillard starred opposite Brad Pitt in Robert Zemeckis's Allied, a spy film set in World War II in which she played Marianne Beausejour, a French Resistance fighter. While critical reviews were mixed, Stephanie Zacharek of Time magazine wrote that "Pitt and Cotillard give sturdy, coded performances that feel naturalistic, not phony: They understand clearly that their chief mission is to tap the tradition of melodrama, and they take it seriously. Somehow, almost incomprehensibly, it all works. Allied looks old but smells new, and the scent is heady." The film grossed US$120 million worldwide. That same year, Cotillard reteamed with Macbeth director Justin Kurzel and co-star Michael Fassbender in the film adaptation of the video game Assassin's Creed.

On 30 January 2017, Cotillard was honored with a special award for her career at the 22nd Lumières Awards in France. In 2017, she also starred in Guillaume Canet's satire comedy Rock'n Roll, and in Arnaud Desplechin's drama Ismael's Ghosts (Les Fantomes d'Ismaël), alongside Mathieu Amalric, Charlotte Gainsbourg and Louis Garrel. The Hollywood Reporter, in its review for the former film, asserted that "Cotillard offers up such a sincere performance that you can't help but laugh".

In the 2018 drama Angel Face (Gueule d'ange) by director Vanessa Fialho, she portrayed Marlene, a woman who suddenly chooses to abandon her daughter for a man she has just met during yet another night of excess. The film premiered in the Un Certain Regard section at the Cannes Film Festival. In 2019, Cotillard reprised the role of Marie in Little White Lies 2, sequel to 2010's Little White Lies directed by Guillaume Canet. In 2020, Cotillard voiced the fox Tutu in the comedy film Dolittle, directed by Stephen Gaghan.

In 2021, she starred as opera singer Ann Defrasnoux alongside Adam Driver in the musical film Annette directed by Leos Carax, which earned her a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. The songs "So May We Start" and "We Love Each Other So Much", performed by Cotillard and Driver, were released as singles.

Cotillard produced the documentary Bigger Than Us, directed by Flore Vasseur, which explores the social movement of young people fighting for change in the 21st Century. The documentary was released in France on 22 September 2021 following its world premiere at the 2021 Cannes Film Festival, and it was nominated for a César Award for Best Documentary Film in 2022.

Cotillard voiced German artist Charlotte Salomon in the French version of the animated biographical film Charlotte, directed by Eric Warin and Tahir Rana, which follows the last 10 years of Salomon's life, a Jewish woman who struggled with depression amid World War II and the Holocaust while exiled in the South of France. Cotillard was also an executive producer on the film that made its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival in September 2021. In October 2021, Cotillard played the stylist Kim Randall in La Vengeance au Triple Galop, a comedy TV film for France's Canal Plus directed by Alex Lutz and Arthur Sanigou.

Cotillard made her third collaboration with director Arnaud Desplechin in the film Brother and Sister (Frère et Sœur), which follows two siblings, Alice and Louis, played by Cotillard and Melvil Poupaud, who are forced to reunite after the death of their parents following two decades of shared silence. The film premiered in the main competition at the 2022 Cannes Film Festival in May 2022.

During the 2022 Cannes Film Festival, Cotillard launched alongside filmmaker Cyril Dion and producer Magali Payen her new production company, Newtopia. The company's central aim is to create content around issues such as environmentalism, science, society, health, geopolitics, feminism and gender "that imagine a better future for the world based on ecologically sustainable and socially fair practices".

In June 2022, Cotillard played Joan of Arc in the oratorio Joan of Arc at the Stake directed by Juanjo Mena at the Teatro Real in Madrid, Spain. She also voiced Coco Chanel in Rencontre(s), a 15-minute immersive virtual reality project directed by Mathias Chelebourg, which premiered at the 79th Venice Film Festival in September 2022.

Marion Cotillard Cannes Film Festival (cropped)
Cotillard and Mona Achache attending an event for Little Girl Blue at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival

In 2023, she appeared in the Apple TV+ climate-change anthology series Extrapolations, and played Cleopatra in Guillaume Canet's adventure comedy film Asterix & Obelix: The Middle Kingdom. She also voiced Louise de Savoy in The Inventor, a stop-motion animated film about the life of Leonardo da Vinci, written and directed by Jim Capobianco, and portrayed Solange d'Ayen, the fashion editor of French Vogue magazine in the World War II biographical drama Lee, directed by Ellen Kuras and starring Kate Winslet as photographer Lee Miller.

Cotillard portrayed French writer and photographer Carole Achache in the docudrama Little Girl Blue, directed by Carole's daughter, Mona Achache, which had its world premiere at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival in the Special Screenings section. Cotillard's performance in the film was praised by critics, with Time Out calling her "illuminating"; Libération calling her "impeccable"; and The Hollywood Reporter writing that her performance is "a full-on Method immersion that climaxes with a wrenching breakdown scene that seems to close some kind of gap between the two women."

Upcoming projects

In June 2023, it was announced that Cotillard will star in Lucile Hadzihalilovic's new film, La Tour de glace, their second collaboration after Innocence (2004).

Other endeavours

Music

Cotillard sings, plays guitar, bass guitar, keyboard and tambourine. She co-wrote and performed the song "La Fille De Joie" for her 2001 film Pretty Things (Les Jolies Choses), in which she played a singer and also performed the song "La Conne" for the film. Canadian singer Hawksley Workman said in interviews about his album Between the Beautifuls that he worked and wrote songs with Cotillard while they both were in Los Angeles during the 2007–2008 movie awards season. In 2008, she co-wrote and performed the song "The Strong Ones" with Hawksley Workman for Olivier Dahan's short film for Cartier's Love range. In 2010, Cotillard recorded the songs "Five Thousand Nights" and "Happy Crowd" with the French Rock band Yodelice for their album "Cardioid". She also went on tour with the band in different cities in France and Belgium, under the pseudonym "Simone", which is her maternal grandmother's name. In the same year, she appeared in the music video "More Than Meets the Eyes" by Yodelice.

Cotillard recorded the song "The Eyes of Mars" with the band Franz Ferdinand especially for Dior. In 2012, she wrote and performed the song "Lily's Body" for the fourth episode of the Lady Dior Web Documentary with the same title, and in 2014, Cotillard wrote and performed the song "Snapshot in LA" alongside John Cameron Mitchell, Metronomy's Joseph Mount and Villaine. She also wrote and co-directed the video for the song, made for Lady Dior's advertising campaign "Enter the Game – Dior Cruise 2015".

Singles
Year Title(s) Notes
2001 "L'homme d'amour" (with Jeanne Moreau) soundtrack of the film Lisa
"La fille de joie" and "La conne" soundtrack of the film Pretty Things
2002 "Une affaire privée" soundtrack of the film A Private Affair
2005 "It Had to Be You" soundtrack of the film Edy
2008 "The Strong Ones" (with Hawksley Workman) for LOVE by Cartier campaign
2009 "Beds Are Burning" for the project TckTckTck – Time for Climate Justice
"My Husband Makes Movies"
"Take It All"
soundtrack of the film Nine
2010 "Five Thousand Nights"
"Happy Crowd" (with Yodelice)
on the album Cardioid by Yodelice
"The Eyes of Mars" (with Franz Ferdinand) for Lady Dior campaign
2012 "Lily's Body" for Lady Dior campaign
2014 "Snapshot in LA" for Lady Dior campaign
2021 "So May We Start"
"We Love Each Other So Much" (with Adam Driver)
soundtrack of the film Annette

Philanthropy

In addition to her film work, Cotillard is active in philanthropy, environmental and social activism, and has participated in campaigns for environmental protection, in particular Greenpeace, for whom she nearly quit acting to join and has been a member of and acted as a spokesperson since 2001. She is also Greenpeace's Ocean Ambassador; the patron of Maud Fontenoy Foundation, a non-governmental organization which is dedicated to teaching children about preserving the oceans; and the ambassador of Association Wayanga [fr], a French association that supports indigenous peoples for their rights and the preservation of their cultures and the Amazon Forest they inhabit. She supports The Heart Fund, an international public charity that is a pioneer in technological innovation to combat cardiovascular diseases in children, and is also a member of World Wide Fund for Nature, and the Nicolas Hulot Foundation, which supports environmental initiatives in France and abroad to engage the ecological transition of our societies.

In 2005, she contributed to Dessins pour le climat ("Drawings for the Climate"), a book of drawings published by Greenpeace to raise funds for the group, and in 2010, she traveled to Congo with Greenpeace to visit tropical rainforests threatened by logging companies, it was shown in the documentary The Congolese Rainforests: Living on Borrowed Time. In 2009, Cotillard was one of many celebrities to record a cover version of the song Beds are Burning by Midnight Oil, in support of TckTckTck and climate justice. In the same year, Cotillard designed her own doll for UNICEF France campaign "Les Frimousses Font Leur Cinéma", that was sold to help vaccinate thousands of children in Darfur. In 2011, she publicly supported Chief Raoni in his fight against the Belo Monte Dam in Brazil and signed his petition.

In 2012, Cotillard was featured on Kate Winslet's book "The Golden Hat: Talking Back To Autism", with celebrity self-portraits to raise awareness and support for autism launched by Winslet's Golden Hat Foundation. In 2013, she caged herself near Paris's Louvre museum to demand the freeing of 30 Greenpeace activists jailed in Russia over an Arctic protest. She entered the cage and held a banner proclaiming "I am a climate defender".

In February 2014, she signed The Tiger Manifesto, a campaign calling for an end to everyday products being manufactured through forest destruction. Launched by Greenpeace, the campaign is encouraging consumers to demand products are forest and tiger-friendly, particularly in Indonesia, where the Sumatran tiger is on brink of extinction. In May 2014, Greenpeace released the animated video The Amazon's Silent Crisis, narrated by Cotillard. The video highlights the troubling illegal logging that threatens the Brazilian Amazon.

On 26 February 2015, she went to the Philippines along France's then-President François Hollande and actress Mélanie Laurent, to participate on a forum and encourage faster and more determined action on the global challenge of climate change. At the 2015 Cannes Film Festival, director Mark Osborne revealed that Cotillard used to visit Children's Hospitals and play The Rose (from the book The Little Prince) for the kids, years before she voiced the character in the 2015 film The Little Prince, directed by Osborne.

Cotillard was the ambassador of "1 Heart 1 Tree", an art project that fights climate change through its Plant for the Planet reforestation program. On 29 November 2015, The Eiffel Tower became a virtual forest with trees and words encouraging environmental activism projected onto it every evening. Cotillard and UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon, inaugurated the light installation on the eve of the official opening of the COP21 conference. She also donated her shoes to be displayed among an installation of over 10,000 shoes at the Place de la Republique in Paris. The installation replaced a giant march for climate change which was forbidden by French authorities following the deadly attacks in the capital on 13 November, which cost 130 lives. It was a way of showing the determination of protesters in their fight against climate change, and allowed them to still send a strong message on the eve of the U.N. climate conference (COP21).

On 10 December 2015, Cotillard voiced the French version of the short film Home, made by Conservation International (CI). The short film debuted at the United Nations Momentum for Change Awards ceremony at the climate negotiations (COP21) in Paris. It was the latest addition to CI's award-winning Nature Is Speaking short film series. "Home" was produced to remind negotiators and world leaders at the climate talks of our common duty – how to care for the Earth that cares for us all. "This Earth is our shared home, our only home. The time to safeguard its future – and with it our own future – is right now," said Cotillard.

In 2019, she signed the petition Résister et créer ("Resist and Create"), created by the movement On Est Prêt along with Cyril Dion to challenge the world of cinema at a time of mobilizations for the climate.

She is a supporter of the French gender equality group Collectif 50/50. On 12 May 2018, Cotillard was one of the 82 women who marched up the stairs to the Cannes Film Festival to protest gender inequality in the film industry.

In March 2020, Cotillard participated on a PSA from the Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health to help educate people on COVID-19 and encouraged them to listen to the health experts to avoid spreading the virus.

In October 2022, Cotillard and other French actresses publicly cut locks from their hair in a video shared on social media with the hashtag #HairForFreedom in support of Iranian protesters following the death of Mahsa Amini, who was arrested for allegedly violating the Islamic Republic of Iran's dress code by not wearing the hijab. In December 2022, Cotillard signed an open letter demanding the release of Iranian actress Taraneh Alidoosti, who had been arrested for standing in solidarity with imprisoned Iranian filmmakers who protested against the Iranian regime. Alidoosti was released on bail in January 2023.

Advertising campaigns and endorsements

Marion Cotillard 1 (July 2009)
Cotillard at an event for Dior in 2009

In 2008, Cotillard was chosen as the face of Dior's bag "Lady Dior", and was featured in an online short film directed by John Cameron Mitchell about the fictional character created by John Galliano. She starred in a series of short films that were situated in different cities to promote the "Lady Dior" handbags: Lady Noire Affair (in Paris) directed by Olivier Dahan; Lady Blue Shanghai, directed by David Lynch; Lady Rouge (in New York City), directed by Jonas Akerlund; and Lady Grey London, directed by John Cameron Mitchell and co-starring Ian McKellen and Russell Tovey. This campaign has also resulted in a musical collaboration with Scottish rock band Franz Ferdinand, where Cotillard has provided the vocals for a composition performed by the group, entitled "The Eyes of Mars", for the "Lady Rouge" campaign.

In 2012, Cotillard starred in the web-series Lady Dior Web Documentary and wrote and performed the song "Lily's body" for one episode. That same year, she also designed her own handbag for Dior, the "360° bag". Cotillard also appeared on the cover of the first issue of Dior Magazine in September 2012. In 2014, she wrote and co-directed alongside Eliott Bliss, a music video for her song "Snapshot in LA", especially for Lady Dior's campaign "Enter The Game – Dior Cuise 2015". Cotillard's contract with Dior ended in 2017.

In May 2013, Cotillard became the first actress to walk the red carpet of the Cannes Film Festival wearing the initial models from the Chopard Green Carpet Collection. In 2015, she designed a bracelet for Chopard's Green Carpet Collection made of ethical Fairmined-certified gold.

In 2020, Cotillard designed her own sustainable jewelry collection for Chopard entitled "Ice Cube Capsule". She designed seven items curated from Fairmined-certified ethical gold and diamonds. The collection was unveiled on 29 September 2020 during Paris fashion week.

On 17 February 2020, Cotillard was announced as House ambassador and the new face of the Chanel No. 5 fragrance. Her first commercial for Chanel No. 5 was released on 29 October 2020. It was directed by Johan Renck and featured Cotillard dancing in the moon with French ballet dancer Jérémie Bélingard while singing a cover of Lorde's "Team".

Personal life

Cotillard was a vegetarian for twelve years during her youth, but she said she had to give up after falling ill because back then she had no idea about nutrition and just quit eating meat overnight and did not know she had to get protein from other sources to avoid a deficiency, which hurt her a lot physically.

In the late 1990s, Cotillard was in a relationship with French actor Julien Rassam. She had a long-term relationship with French actor Stéphan Guérin-Tillié from 2000 to 2005, with whom she co-starred in the short films Quelques jours de trop (2000) and Heureuse (2001), in the 2001 TV series Les redoutables, and in the 2005 feature films Cavalcade and Edy. She dated French singer Sinclair from 2005 to 2007.

Since October 2007, Cotillard has been in a relationship with French actor and director Guillaume Canet. They had been friends since 1997, and co-starred together for the first time years later in the 2003 film Love Me If You Dare. Despite common misconception, the couple are not married. Though since 2010 Cotillard has been spotted wearing a diamond solitaire on her left hand —a present from Canet— they are not engaged either. In 2014, Cotillard denied being married to Canet, instead referring to him as "my boyfriend" in interviews. In 2011, they had their first child, a son, Marcel, and in 2017, their second child, a daughter, Louise was born.

In January 2018, Cotillard said that with her then 6-year-old son entering school and a newborn daughter, she would be slowing down her filming schedule for the time being. In a May 2023 interview, she explained that she slowed down in order to protect her children, as she rarely choses "lighthearted stories" and her roles were preventing her from living her life fully, citing La Vie en rose (2007) and Macbeth (2015) as examples of that. "There are two kinds of actresses: those who burn themselves out, and those who manage to put the character aside and come home in the evening. Today, I'm halfway there. Since becoming a mother, I have put boundaries to protect my children", she said.

Filmography

Marion Cotillard Cannes 2017
Cotillard at the 2017 Cannes Film Festival

As of 2023, Cotillard's films have grossed more than $3.6 billion at the worldwide box-office.

Feature films

Key
Films that have not yet been released Denotes films that have not yet been released
Year Title Role Notes or original title
1994 The Story of a Boy Who Wanted to Be Kissed Mathilde L'Histoire du garçon qui voulait qu'on l'embrasse
1996 Belle Verte, LaLa Belle Verte Macha
1998 Taxi Lilly Bertineau
1999 War in the Highlands Julie Bonzon La Guerre dans le Haut Pays
Furia Élia
Blue Away to America Solange Du bleu jusqu'en Amérique
2000 Taxi 2 Lilly Bertineau
2001 Lisa Young Lisa
Pretty Things Marie / Lucie Les Jolies Choses
2002 A Private Affair Clarisse Entoven Une affaire privée
2003 Taxi 3 Lilly Bertineau
Love Me If You Dare Sophie Kowalsky Jeux d'enfants
Big Fish Joséphine Bloom First English-language film
2004 Innocence Mademoiselle Éva
Very Long Engagement, AA Very Long Engagement Tina Lombardi Un long dimanche de fiançailles
2005 Cavalcade Alizée
Love Is in the Air Alice Ma vie en l'air
Mary Gretchen Mol
Burnt Out Lisa Sauf le respect que je vous dois
The Black Box Isabelle Kruger / Alice La Boîte Noire
Edy Céline / La chanteuse du rêve
2006 Toi et moi Léna
Dikkenek Nadine
Fair Play Nicole
Good Year, AA Good Year Fanny Chenal
2007 Vie en rose, LaLa Vie en rose Édith Piaf La môme
2009 Public Enemies Billie Frechette
Last Flight, TheThe Last Flight Marie Vallières de Beaumont Le dernier vol
Nine Luisa Contini
2010 Inception Mal
Little White Lies Marie Les petits mouchoirs
2011 Midnight in Paris Adriana
Contagion Dr. Leonora Orantes
2012 Rust and Bone Stéphanie De Rouille et D'os
Dark Knight Rises, TheThe Dark Knight Rises Miranda Tate / Talia al Ghul
2013 The Immigrant Ewa Cybulska
Blood Ties Monica
Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues CBC News Co-host Cameo
2014 Two Days, One Night Sandra Bya Deux jours, une nuit
2015 The Little Prince The Rose Voice
Macbeth Lady Macbeth
2016 It's Only the End of the World Catherine Juste la fin du monde
From the Land of the Moon Gabrielle Mal de Pierres
Allied Marianne Beauséjour
Assassin's Creed Dr. Sofia Rikkin
2017 Rock'n Roll Marion Cotillard
Ismael's Ghosts Carlotta Les Fantômes d'Ismaël
2018 Angel Face Marlène Gueule d'ange
2019 Little White Lies 2 Marie Nous finirons ensemble
2020 Dolittle Tutu Voice
2021 Annette Ann Defrasnoux
Bigger Than Us Documentary; as producer
2022 Brother and Sister Alice Frère et Sœur
Rencontre(s) Coco Chanel Voice
2023 Asterix & Obelix: The Middle Kingdom Cleopatra / Tipsy Astérix et Obélix: l'Empire du Milieu
Little Girl Blue Carole Achache
The Inventor Louise de Savoy Voice
Lee Solange d'Ayen

Short films

Year Title Role Director
1996 Insalata Mista Juliette Emmanuel Hamon
1997 Affaire classée Nathalie Luc Gallissaires
La sentence Mauro Losa
1998 La surface de réparation Stella Valérie Müller
1999 L'appel de la cave Rachel Mathieu Mercier
2000 Quelques jours de trop Franck Guérin
Le marquis Gilles Paquet-Brenner
2001 Heureuse La virtuelle de 35 kg. Céline Nieszawer
Boomer Mme Boomer Karim Adda
2009 Lady Noire Affair Lady Noire Olivier Dahan
2010 Lady Rouge Lady Rouge Jonas Åkerlund
Lady Blue Shanghai Lady Blue David Lynch
Lady Grey London Lady Grey John Cameron Mitchell
2011 L.A.dy Dior Margaux John Cameron Mitchell

Television

Year Title Role Notes
1982 Le monde des tout-petits Short film
1983 Lucie Short film
1993 Étude sur le Mouvement Fairy Segment: "Intériorité"
Highlander Lori Bellian Episodes: "Saving Grace" and "Nowhere to Run"
1994 Extrême Limite Sophie Colbert Episodes: "Père et fille" and "La pistonnée"
1996 Théo la tendresse Laura Episode: "La nouvelle de la semaine"
Chloé Chloé Television film
L'@mour est à réinventer Laurence Episode: "La mouette"
1998 Interdit de Vieillir Abigail Dougnac Television film
2001 Les Redoutables Gabby Episode: "Doggy dog"
Une femme piégée (aka Vertigo: A Woman in Danger) Florence Lacaze Television film
2005 Une américaine à Paris Herself Television film
2008 Génération duo Herself Television film
2013 Le Débarquement Nathalie the Bear 1 episode
2014 Comedy Central's All-Star Non-Denominational Christmas Special Herself 1 episode
2015 Castings Herself Rap battle with Nekfeu and Orelsan (1 episode)
2021 La Vengeance au Triple Galop Kim Randall Television film
2023 Extrapolations Sylvie Bolo Episode: "2068: The Going Away Party"

Voice work

Cotillard has dubbed several films and documentaries in France and in the U.S., and also dubbed in French all of her roles in English-language films.

Year Title Role Notes
2003 Big Fish Joséphine Bloom French version
2004 Cinq Contes Musicaux Pour les Petits Narrator Children's audio book (in French)
2005 Mary Gretchen Mol French version
2006 Happy Feet Gloria French version only
2009 Public Enemies Billie Frechette French version
Nine Luisa Contini French version
OceanWorld 3D Sea Turtle Documentary (French version)
2010 Inception Mal French version
2011 Midnight in Paris Adriana French version
Contagion Dr. Leonora Orantes French version
2012 The Dark Knight Rises Miranda Tate French version
2013 The Immigrant Ewa Cybulska French version
Blood Ties Monica French version
2014 Terre des Ours Narrator Documentary (French version)
The Amazon's Silent Crisis Narrator Short Film for Greenpeace (English version)
2015 Minions Scarlet Overkill French version only
April and the Extraordinary World Avril a.k.a. Avril et le Monde truqué, original French version
Unity Narrator Documentary (in English)
Home Narrator Short Film (French version)
2016 Allied Marianne Beausejour French version
Assassin's Creed Dr. Sofia Rikkin French version
2017 Assassin's Creed: Origins Cameo appearance
2021 Charlotte Charlotte Salomon French version; also executive producer

Music videos

List of music video appearances, showing year released, artist(s) and director(s)
Year Title Artist(s) Director(s) Ref.
1990 Petite fille Les Wampas Unknown
2003 No Reason to Cry Out Your Eyes Hawksley Workman Unknown
2004 Givin'Up Richard Archer and Tommy Hools Unknown
2009 Beds Are Burning TckTckTck – Time for Climate Justice Chic & Artistic
2010 More Than Meets the Eye Yodelice Unknown
Breathe In Yodelice Unknown
Take It All (from the film Nine) Marion Cotillard Rob Marshall
The Eyes of Mars Marion Cotillard and Franz Ferdinand Jonas Åkerlund
2012 Lily's Body Marion Cotillard Eliott Bliss
2013 The Next Day David Bowie Floria Sigismondi
2014 Snapshot in LA / Lady Dior – Enter the Game Marion Cotillard Eliott Bliss and Marion Cotillard

Theatre

Year Production Role Location Notes Date Director Ref.
1997 Y'a des Nounours Dans les Placards Unknown Théâtre Contemporain de la Danse, France Laurent Cotillard
2005 Joan of Arc at the Stake Joan of Arc Palais des Sports d'Orléans, Orléans, France Oratorio by Arthur Honegger
libretto by Paul Claudel
5–6 May 2005 Jean-Marc Cochereau
2012 L'Auditori de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain 17 November 2012 Marc Soustrot
2015 Rainier III Auditorium, Monaco 8 February 2015 Kazuki Yamada
Théâtre du Capitole, Toulouse, France 14 February 2015
Philharmonie, Grande Salle, Paris, France 3–4 March 2015
Avery Fisher Hall, New York City, NY 10–13 June 2015 Côme de Bellescize
2018 Spoleto Festival dei Due Mondi, Piazza del Duomo, Spoleto, Italy 18 July 2018 Benoît Jacquot
2019 Romanian Athenaeum, Bucharest, Romania 19 September 2019 Alexandre Bloch
2022 Teatro Real, Madrid, Spain 7–17 June 2022 Juanjo Mena

Accolades

Marion Cotillard César 2018
Cotillard at a César Awards event in 2018

Among other awards, Cotillard has received an Academy Award for Best Actress, a Golden Globe Award, a BAFTA Award, two César Awards, a Lumières Award and a European Film Award. She has also won a New York Film Critics Circle Award, a National Society of Film Critics Award, and a Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress, the critics' awards trifecta. Cotillard, Isabelle Adjani, and Isabelle Huppert are the only French actresses to win the New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actress.

In March 2010, Cotillard was made a Chevalier (Knight) of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres (Order of the Arts and Letters) by the French government for her "contribution to the enrichment of French culture". She was promoted to Officier (Officer) on 10 February 2016.

On 14 July 2016, Cotillard received France's highest honor – she was named a Knight of the Legion of Honour. She was among 650 names from the worlds of politics, culture, sport and public life published in the government's official journal for Bastille Day.

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Marion Cotillard para niños

  • List of actors with two or more Academy Award nominations in acting categories
  • List of actors nominated for Academy Awards for non-English performances
  • List of Academy Award winners and nominees for Best Foreign Language Film
  • List of French Academy Award winners and nominees


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