Pierre Fresnay (born April 4, 1897, Paris, France—died Jan. 9, 1975, Paris) was a versatile French actor who abandoned a career with the Comédie-Française for the challenge of the cinema. Groomed for the stage by his uncle, the actor Claude Garry, Fresnay made his first stage appearance in 1912 before entering the Paris Conservatory.
Admitted to the Comédie-Française as a pensionnaire (contract player) in 1915, he played 80 roles there, making a particular impression in the plays of Alfred de Musset. He became a sociétaire (life member) four years before he resigned in 1927. During the next 10 years he worked in England and the United States as well as in France. He was outstanding in the title roles in Cyrano de Bergerac (1928) and Don Juan (London, 1934). In London and New York City, Fresnay made his English-language debut in Noël Coward’s Conversation Piece (1934) opposite his wife, the actress Yvonne Printemps. Subsequently the couple became managers of the Théâtre de la Michodière in Paris (1937).
Although he made several silent films, his reputation as a cinema actor was established with his portrayal of Marius in the screen adaptations of Marcel Pagnol’s trilogy: Marius (1931), Fanny (1932), and César (1936). His appearance as the young French officer opposite Erich von Stroheim in Jean Renoir’s La Grande Illusion (1937; Grand Illusion) was a high point in his film career, although his principal honours came for later works: the Venice Biennial Prize (1947) for Monsieur Vincent and awards for Dieu à besoin des hommes (1950; God Needs Men).