Yves Montand (born October 13, 1921, Monsummano Alto, Italy—died November 9, 1991, Senlis, France) was a French stage and film actor and popular cabaret singer.
Though considered by many to be the quintessence of worldly Gallic charm, Montand was actually born in Italy to peasants who fled to Marseille when he was two years of age to escape the Fascist regime of Benito Mussolini. At age 18 he was singing in music halls and supplementing his income by working as a longshoreman.
In Paris, as the protégé of chanteuse Edith Piaf, he appeared in the 1945 motion picture Étoile sans lumière (Star Without Light). He married actress Simone Signoret in 1951. His role in La Salaire de la peur (1953; Wages of Fear) brought him international fame. His autobiography, Du Soleil plein la tête (Sunshine Fills My Mind), was published in 1955, before he gave his most-acclaimed performances, in La Guerre est finie (1966; The War Is Over) and in two films by director Costa-Gavras, Z (1968) and L’Aveu (1970; The Confession). His performances in Claude Berri’s film adaptations of two novels by Marcel Pagnol—Jean de Florette (1986) and its sequel, Manon des sources (1986; Manon of the Spring)—were also highly acclaimed.