François Civil

French actor (born 1990) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

François Civil

François Civil (French pronunciation: [fʁɑ̃.swa si.vil]; born 29 January 1990)[1][2] is a French actor. He has appeared in both French and English-language productions and is known for his roles in films such as Frank (2014), As Above, So Below (2014), Five (2016), Burn Out (2017), Love at Second Sight (2019), The Wolf's Call (2019), Who You Think I Am (2019), Someone, Somewhere (2019), BAC Nord (2021), for voicing Buzz Lightyear in the French version of the animated film Lightyear (2022), and for playing D'Artagnan in The Three Musketeers: D'Artagnan (2023) and The Three Musketeers: Milady (2023). On television, he has starred in the Disney Channel teen sitcom series Trop la Classe! (2006), in the France 2 comedy-drama series Call My Agent! (2015–17), and in the Netflix comedy miniseries Fiasco (2024).

Quick Facts Born, Occupation ...
François Civil
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Born (1990-01-29) 29 January 1990 (age 35)[1]
Paris, France[1]
OccupationActor
Years active2005–present
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Civil won a Chopard Trophy for Male Revelation at the 2019 Cannes Film Festival, and has earned two nominations for the César Award for Best Supporting Actor; for BAC Nord in 2022 and for Rise in 2023. He was named Actor of the Year by GQ France's Men of the Year Awards in 2023.

Early life

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Civil was born in the 12th arrondissement of Paris on 29 January 1990,[1] to a French mother from Avignon and a Tahitian father.[2] His parents are both University professors of Spanish.[1][3][4] His paternal grandmother is Tahitian and his paternal grandfather is Catalan.[2] He has an older sister.[5]

In addition to his native French, Civil also speaks English, Spanish,[6] and a bit of Italian.[7]

Civil has a depigmentation of the skin of his arms and a lock of white hair since he was fifteen.[5] He told French magazine Paris Match in 2019 that no doctor could tell him why, but he believes this happened due to stress.[5]

Civil started acting at the age of fourteen.[8][9] He signed up for an acting class because he wanted to get closer to a girl who was taking acting lessons.[10] The feeling was not mutual, but he ended up falling in love with theater.[11] After spotting him at a school play, the mother of one of the students who was also a casting director encouraged him to continue on this path and insisted that he should go to auditions.[1][9] Thanks to her, he passed a test and landed a role in his first film, Le Cactus.[12] Civil was also inspired to become an actor after watching the performance of Chinese actress Zhang Ziyi in Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000).[13] In 2006, he made a brief stint at the French drama school Cours Florent,[14] which he did not like.[15]

Civil was an hyperactive child and had trouble concentrating at school.[16][17] Theatre, music and sports such as basketball helped him channel his energy and express himself.[17][15]

Career

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Early work (2005–2015)

In 2005, while studying theater at the studio Le Magasin,[18] Civil made his feature film debut with a small role in the comedy Le Cactus, directed by Michel Munz and Gérard Bitton.[19] His second acting gig was an episode of the TV series Louis la Brocante.[20]

In 2006, he played the high school student Dread in the Disney Channel France teen sitcom series Trop la Classe!,[20][21] that led him to participate in the 2007 Disney Channel Games representing France.[22]

Civil left Trop la Classe! when director Laurence Ferreira Barbosa offered him the leading role in her independent drama film Dying or Feeling Better (Soit je meurs, soit je vais mieux) released in 2008,[9] in which he played a young schoolboy who falls in love with twin sisters.[23] His performance, at the age of 18, earned him a nomination for the Lumières Award for Most Promising Actor,[24] and a pre-nomination for the César Award for Most Promising Actor in 2009.[25][26] That same year, he appeared in the web-series Twenty Show released on Myspace,[27][28] which later became a TV film broadcast by Arte in May 2009.[29]

He then continued his theater studies while filming for cinema and television, in particular with the main role in the short film In Our Blood (Dans nos veines), directed by Guillaume Senez,[30] for which he won the Best Actor award at the Brussels Short Film Festival[31] and the double award for interpretation (Jury Award and Audience Award) at the 15th Jean Carmet Festival in Moulins.[18]

In 2010, he was a part of the young cast of the film Bus Palladium, directed by Christopher Thompson.[32] That same year, he did not go to class for all of his senior year because he knew he wanted to pursue acting.[5] He finally presented himself to the Bac exams and obtained it by chance.[2] He stayed in high school for a total of five years after repeating his sophomore year three times.[5]

In 2011, he starred in the World War II drama 15 Lads (Nos résistances) directed by Romain Cogitore, in which he portrayed a member of the French Resistance[33] and received a second pre-nomination for the César Award for Most Promising Actor.[34] He also reprised his role as Dread in the TV series Trop la Classe Café!, and appeared in the erotic drama film Elles directed by Małgorzata Szumowska, in which he played the teenage son of the protagonist portrayed by Juliette Binoche.[35][36]

In 2013, he won the Premier Rendez-vous prize at the Cabourg Film Festival for his performance in the comedy film Macadam Baby, written and directed by Patrick Bossard.[37] Between 2013 and 2015, he starred on Canal+'s Casting(s), a short comedy series about the world of cinema created by Pierre Niney and Ali Marhyar.[19][38]

In 2014, he ventured into English-language productions, such as the independent British-Irish black comedy film Frank, directed by Lenny Abrahamson, in which he played Baraque, the bassist of the band Soronprfbs, led by the title character played by Michael Fassbender.[39] Civil and the other actors of Frank performed the songs live in the film and in the album with the soundtrack.[40][41] The band performed at concerts in real life to promote the film,[42] such as the talk show The Colbert Report on 6 August 2014.[43] Civil also played the urban explorer Papillon in the American horror film As Above, So Below, directed by John Erick Dowdle,[44][45] and had a supporting role in the American mini-series Rosemary's Baby, directed by Agnieszka Holland.[18]

In 2015, he filmed a pilot for a TV series created by Alan Ball and produced by Elton John for HBO called Virtuoso, which would be set in the 18th century and feature young musical prodigies from all over Europe who studied at the prestigious Academy of Musical Excellence in Vienna, where he would play the young Spanish guitarist and flautist Isidoro,[46] but the channel did not pick it up as a series.[47]

After several appearances in French TV series, in 2015 Civil landed a recurring supporting role as aspiring actor Hippolyte Rivière in the popular comedy series Call My Agent! (Dix pour cent), created by Fanny Herrero.[19][48] He also had a supporting role in the thriller Made in France, directed by Nicolas Boukhrief.[49]

Breakthrough (2016–present)

In 2016, he became known to the general public when he co-starred alongside Pierre Niney in the comedy film Five directed by Igor Gotesman,[25] based on a 2011 short film of the same name that Civil and Gotesman had starred in.[50] That same year, Civil and his co-stars from Five appeared in the music video for the song "Reuf" by French rapper Nekfeu, which was featured in the film's soundtrack.[51]

In 2017, he starred in the French action film Burn Out directed by Yann Gozlan.[52] He also played the youngest sibling of Ana Girardot and Pio Marmaï in the drama Back to Burgundy (Ce qui nous lie), directed by Cédric Klapisch.[53]

He was a member of the jury of the "33 short films" section of the 2018 Cabourg Film Festival,[54] and was also a member of the Revelation jury at the 2018 Deauville American Film Festival presided by Cédric Kahn.[55]

The year 2019 allowed him to lead several projects: first the geopolitical thriller The Wolf's Call (Le Chant du loup) by Antonin Baudry;[56] then in Safy Nebbou's psychological thriller Who You Think I Am (Celle que vous croyez) alongside Juliette Binoche;[36] then he co-starred with Joséphine Japy in the romantic comedy Love at Second Sight (Mon Inconnue) directed by Hugo Gélin,[57] which earned him the Best Actor award at the L'Alpe d'Huez Film Festival,[58] and he also reunited with Cédric Klapisch and Ana Girardot in the romantic comedy Someone, Somewhere (Deux moi),[59] for which he earned a nomination for the Globe de Cristal Award for Best Actor.[60]

Civil won a Chopard Trophy for Male Revelation at the 2019 Cannes Film Festival.[13] That same year, he was a member of the jury for the 9th Nikon Film Festival presided by Marjane Satrapi,[61] and was also a member of the feature film jury at the 11th Beaune International Thriller Film Festival presided by Benoît Jacquot.[62]

In 2020, he appeared in one episode of the Canal+ comedy series La Flamme, a spoof of reality dating competition shows.[63]

In 2021, he starred the film BAC Nord directed by Cédric Jimenez, in which he played a police officer from the Anti-Crime Squad (BAC) of Marseille opposite Gilles Lellouche and Karim Leklou,[64] which earned Civil a nomination for the César Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance.[65] He also had a supporting role as a motel manager whose right forearm had a prosthesis with a baseball glove replacing his hand in the comedy TV film La Vengeance au Triple Galop,[66] a parody of the 1983 Australian TV series Return to Eden, directed by Alex Lutz and Arthur Sanigou and broadcast by Canal+ on 4 October 2021.[67]

In 2022, he played the physiotherapist Yann in the comedy drama Rise (En corps) by Cédric Klapisch,[68] for which he received his second César nomination for Best Supporting Actor.[69] He also lent his voice to the character Buzz Lightyear in the French version of the animated film Lightyear,[70] and he voiced the character Phillip Graves in the French version of the video game Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II.[71]

In 2023, he portrayed D'Artagnan in two new French film adaptations of Alexandre Dumas' 1844 novel The Three Musketeers directed by Martin Bourboulon; The Three Musketeers: D'Artagnan and The Three Musketeers: Milady.[72] D'Artagnan became his biggest commercial success, with over 3 million tickets sold in France.[73] The same year, he played an undercover police officer who infiltrates a group of environmental activists in Romain Cogitore's romantic thriller A Place to Fight For (Une zone à défendre), the first French original film from Disney+.[74]

In November 2023, Civil was named Actor of the Year by GQ France's Men of the Year Awards.[75]

In 2024, Civil stars in the drama The Good Teacher (Pas de vagues), directed by Teddy Lussi-Modeste,[76] in Beating Hearts directed by Gilles Lellouche,[77] and in Fiasco, a comedy miniseries co-created by Pierre Niney and Igor Gotesman for Netflix.[78]

In October 2024, Civil started filming Arnaud Desplechin's 14th feature film, Une affaire, in which he portrays a pianist who lives an impossible love story.[79]

Other ventures

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Photography

Civil is an amateur photographer.[80] A series of photos taken by him entitled "Cambodia" were exhibited at the Atelier Couronnes in Paris between October and November 2017 during the Rencontres Photographiques du 10ème.[81][82]

In an interview for Madame Figaro in April 2019, Civil announced that he was working on a photographic project around his anxiety about the passing of time and aging, and that this project would see the light of day "in perhaps twenty years".[10]

Music

Civil is also a musician.[5] He plays bass, guitar and piano.[2] From 2009 to 2018,[83] he was a member of an electro-folk/alternative-rock group called Collective Kingdom,[84] for which he was the singer,[10] the guitarist and the composer.[17]

In March 2014, he composed the score for the short film La Nuit de Pierre Niney,[85] directed by his long-time friend Pierre Niney for the promotion of the perfume La nuit de l'homme by Yves Saint Laurent.[86]

In December 2022, he composed along with Ferdinand Cros the music for the short film Here & Now starring his longtime friend Pierre Niney[50][87] for the Dior perfume Bois d'Argent.[88]

Sports

He has been playing basketball since he was a teenager,[17][89] and rock climbing since 2016.[15][90]

Advertising campaigns

In May 2021, Civil became the new ambassador of the Italian high jewelry brand Bulgari.[91]

Political views

In September 2018, following the resignation of the French Minister of Ecology Nicolas Hulot, Civil co-signed the column "The greatest challenge in the history of humanity", calling on the government to take "firm and immediate" action in the face of the danger of global warming.[92]

In June 2023, Civil expressed his support to the French environmental activists known as "Zadists".[87] He told Le Parisien in July 2023 that starring in the film A Place to Fight For (2023) was an engagement, even if it was anecdotal compared to that of the Zadists; and that he was very proud to star in this film because it sheds light on the ZAD and pays tribute to "these people who sacrifice a lot of their lives for the planet".[93]

In March 2024, Civil expressed his support to the #MeToo movement in French cinema and to actresses Judith Godrèche and Anouk Grinberg, for the liberation of women's voices and against sexist and sexual violence in French cinema.[94][95]

On 4 June 2024, he signed a petition addressed to French President Emmanuel Macron demanding France to officially recognize the State of Palestine.[96]

On 28 June 2024, Civil shared two Instagram Stories encouraging his followers to vote against the French far-right party National Rally and against their candidate for French prime minister, Jordan Bardella, for the then-upcoming French parliamentary elections whose first round took place on 30 June 2024.[97] On 6 July 2024, a day before the second round of the elections, he shared a post against the National Rally candidates.[98]

Filmography

Feature films

Key
Denotes films that have not yet been released
More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Role Director Notes
2005 Le cactus Young Patrick Gérard Bitton
Michel Munz
2007 Molière Louis Béjart Laurent Tirard
2008 Daddy Cool (15 ans et demi) Festival goer François Desagnat
Thomas Sorriaux
Dying or Feeling Better (Soit je meurs, soit je vais mieux) Martial Laurence Ferreira Barbosa
Sur ta joue ennemie Milan Jean-Xavier de Lestrade
Flirts Xavier Lionel Dos Santos Short
2009 In Our Blood (Dans nos veines) Lionel Guillaume Senez Short
Omar Arthur Sébastien Gabriel Short
2010 Bus Palladium Mario Christopher Thompson
2011 15 Lads (Nos résistances) François/Racine Romain Cogitore
Une pure affaire Tom Alexandre Coffre
Five Timothée Igor Gotesman Short
Elles Florent Małgorzata Szumowska
2012 Vacances Romain Frédéric Doll Short
2013 The Stroller Strategy (La stratégie de la poussette) François Clément Michel
Fonzy Hugo Isabelle Doval
It Boy (20 ans d'écart) Student David Moreau
Pour le rôle François Pierre Niney Short
2014 Frank Baraque Lenny Abrahamson
As Above, So Below Papillon John Erick Dowdle
Macadam Baby Thomas Patrick Bossard
Les Baumettes Jean-Louis Raphel Hugo Gélin Short
2016 Made in France Christophe Nicolas Boukhrief
Five Timothée Igor Gotesman
2017 Back to Burgundy (Ce qui nous lie) Jérémie Cédric Klapisch
Burn Out Tony Yann Gozlan
2019 Love at Second Sight (Mon Inconnue) Raphaël Ramisse/
Zoltan
Hugo Gélin
Who You Think I Am (Celle que vous croyez) Alex Chelly Safy Nebbou
The Wolf's Call (Le Chant du loup) Chanteraide Antonin Baudry
Someone, Somewhere (Deux moi) Rémy Pelletier Cédric Klapisch
2021 BAC Nord Antoine Cédric Jimenez
2022 Rise (En corps) Yann Cédric Klapisch
Lightyear Buzz Lightyear Angus MacLane Voice; French version
2023 The Three Musketeers: D'Artagnan D'Artagnan Martin Bourboulon
A Place to Fight For (Une zone à défendre) Greg Romain Cogitore Disney+ film
The Three Musketeers: Milady D'Artagnan Martin Bourboulon
2024 The Good Teacher (Pas de vagues) Julien Teddy Lussi-Modeste
Beating Hearts (L'Amour ouf) Clotaire Gilles Lellouche
TBA Une affaire Mathias Arnaud Desplechin Filming
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Television

Key
Denotes works that have not yet been released
More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Role Notes
2006 Louis la brocante Arthur TV series; 1 episode
Trop la Classe! Dread TV series; 1 season
2007 Disney Channel Games Himself TV series; 9 episodes
Autopsy Paco Mercadier TV movie
2008 P.J. Axel Avranche TV series; 1 episode
Twenty Show Victor Web-series; 1 season
2009 Sweet Dream TV series; 1 season
Twenty Show: The Film Victor TV movie
Enquêtes réservées Antoine Morrand TV series; 1 episode
2011 Simple Enzo TV movie
Hard Tony TV series; 2 episodes
Trop la Classe Café! Dread TV series; 1 season
Emma Jérôme TV movie
Tiger Lily, quatre femmes dans la vie Ziggy Miniseries; 6 episodes
2013 Le clan des Lanzac Julien Verneuil TV movie
Alias Caracalla, au coeur de la Résistance Maurice de Chaveigné Miniseries; 2 episodes
2013–15 Casting(s) François TV series; 22 episodes
2014 Rosemary's Baby Jacques Miniseries; 2 episodes
2015 L'héritière Guillaume TV movie
2015–17 Call My Agent ! (Dix pour cent) Hippolyte Rivière TV series; 10 episodes
2017 Calls Tom TV series; 1 episode
2020 La Flamme Luc TV series; 1 episode
2021 La Vengeance au Triple Galop Rodney Stingwing TV movie
2024 Fiasco Tom / Bartabé Miniseries; 7 episodes[99]
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Video games

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Role Notes Ref.
2022 Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II Philip Graves Voice role; French version [71]
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Theatre

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Author Director Notes Ref.
2010–11 Le Carton Clément Michel Arthur Jugnot Palais des Glaces [14]
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Awards and nominations

More information Year, Award ...
Year Award Category Work Result Ref.
2009 Lumières Award Most Promising Actor Dying or Feeling Better Nominated [24]
Festival Jean-Carmet Jury Award - Best Actor In Our Blood Won [100]
Audience Award - Best Actor Won [100]
2010 Brussels Short Film Festival Best Actor Won [31]
2013 Cabourg Film Festival Premier Rendez-Vous Macadam Baby Won [37]
2019 L'Alpe d'Huez Film Festival Best Actor Love at Second Sight Won [58]
Cannes Film Festival Chopard Trophy for Male Revelation Won [13][101]
2020 Globes de Cristal Award Best Actor Someone, Somewhere Nominated [60]
2022 César Awards Best Supporting Actor BAC Nord Nominated [65]
2023 César Awards Rise Nominated [69]
GQ France Men of the Year Awards Actor of the Year Won [75]
2024 French Association of Series Critics Awards Best Supporting Actor Fiasco Nominated [102]
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References

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