Muriel Robin
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Muriel Robin (born 2 August 1955) is a French actress and comedian. She won an
International Emmy Award for Best Actress The International Emmy Award for Best Performance by an Actress is an award presented annually by the International Academy of Television Arts and Sciences (IATAS). The award honors the best performance by an actress in a made for-television ficti ...
in 2007 and received a nomination for a César Award in 2001 and six nominations for a Molière Award.


Early years

Muriel Robin is the youngest of three children of Antoine Robin and Aimée Rimbaud, who owned shoe-shops in Montbrison. She had two sisters, Nydia and Martine. In 1960, the family moved to Saint-Étienne. When she was very young, she liked to make people laugh and dreamed of becoming a singer. After a lacklustre school career and a love of parties, she ended up failing her Baccalaureate twice in a row. Unsure of which career to follow, she started to sell shoes in one of the family's three shops, without being really motivated. In 1977, aged 22, she left Saint-Étienne for Paris, taking a course in dramatic arts at Cours Florent, the entry college for the National Superior Conservatory for Dramatic Arts, in Paris. She left as Conservatory Laureate, and returned to sell shoes again in Saint-Étienne


The 1980s

In 1981, she joined Roger Louret, whom she had met in Paris, in Monclar, with his theatre company, Les Baladins en Agenais. Notable people that she met there include
Elie Semoun Elie and Earlsferry is a coastal town and former royal burgh in Fife, and parish, Scotland, situated within the East Neuk beside Chapel Ness on the north coast of the Firth of Forth, eight miles east of Leven. The burgh comprised the linked vi ...
and Annie Grégorio. In 1983, she returned to Paris with Annie Grégorio to work at the Petit Théâtre de Bouvard., where she also met Didier Bénureau. She came up against the authoritarian methods of Philippe Bouvard, but, even so, he gave her a part in a play he had written, ''Double Foyer''. Following that, she played in a role co-written with Didier Bénureau,'' Maman ou Donne-moi ton linge, je fais une machine, ''(Mother, or, Give me your laundry, I am washing a load), in 1986, in Avignon, and in 1987 in Paris, at the Théâtre de Dix heures. The play was later shown in Monclar at the Théâtre de Poche. She became known to the wider public, towards the end of the 1980s through a television programme called La Classe, broadcast by FR3 (which became France 3). Muriel Robin met and became good friends with Pierre Palmade. They created her first one-woman-show together, ''Les majorettes se cachent pour mourir'', in 1988, directed by Roger Louret. This programme was a success and pushed Robin into the limelight.


The 1991s

During the 1990s, Robin appeared in numerous plays including ''Tout m’Enerve, Bedos-Robin'' a collaboration with Roger Louret, ''Feu la Ma La Mère, ''and ''On Purge Bébé''. She also spent some time presenting her work on radio, on Europe 1, with her programme, ''Tout Robin''. In 1997, she obtained her first role in cinema, replacing Valérie Lemercier in'' Les Couloirs du temps : Les Visiteurs 2 ''by Jean-Marie Poiré. The same year she wrote and directed with Pierre Palmade in the play,'' Ils s'aiment,(They Love Each Other)'' played by Pierre Palmade and Michèle Laroque, which was a notable success with the public and received a nomination for the Molière for the Best One-Man-Show or Sketch Show.


The 2000s

In May, 2000, she announced that she would finish with the genre of the one-woman-show and concentrate on her profession as a comedian, but also that year, took her first big role in cinema in the eponymous role of ''Marie-Line'', by Medhi Charef. Other roles on stage and screen followed, in the following years.


Support for charity

Between 1992 and 2007, Muriel Robin was active in supporting concerts by the Enfoirés given for " the Restos du Cœur" created by Coluche and of which she became a sponsor until 2007. In 2001 she became equally involved with the journalist Marine Jacquemin in "La Chaine de l’Espoir" (The Chain of Hope) organised by the French Medical Institute for "L'Enfant de Kaboul" (The child of Kabul), in Afghanistan. This hospital opened in 2005.


Theatre


Filmography


References


External links

* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Robin, Muriel French film actresses 20th-century French actresses 21st-century French actresses LGBT comedians Living people International Emmy Award for Best Actress winners 1955 births Cours Florent alumni