Aurélien Recoing (born 5 May 1958) is a French actor and stage director. Aurélien Recoing is the son of Alain Recoing (puppeteer), and the brother of Éloi Recoing (director and translator), Blaise Recoing (actor and musician), and David Recoing (pianist, composer). Born in Paris on May 5, 1958, Aurélien Recoing began training to be an actor in 1974 at Cours Florent, and studied at Quartier d'Ivry. In 1977, the actor-in-training, who spoke fluent English and a little Russian, joined the Conservatoire national supérieur d'art dramatique in Paris, where he studied under Jean-Pierre Miquel and Antoine Vitez. He has appeared in more than 30 plays and has directed stage performances of works by Thomas Bernhard, Fernando Pessoa and Paul Claudel. He was awarded the Prix Gérard Philipe in 1989. In 1980, Aurélien Recoing took his first steps into the world of cinema, in Exploits of a Young Don Juan. Finding art-house cinema appealing to him, he worked with Philippe Garrel on Emergency Kisses (Les baisers de secours), and with Laurence Ferreira Barbosa on Modern Life. The actor rose to fame in 2001 thanks to Laurent Cantet's Time Out (L'Emploi du Temps), in which he plays a man who invents a false life to avoid having to tell his friends and family that he has been fired from his job. As he became more and more in demand, he alternated between blockbusters such as Ruby & Quentin and That Woman and art-house films like L'Ennemi naturel and Orlando Vargas. Lending his talents to a number of unusual projects, in 2006 he portrayed a gamblers in 13 Tzameti, Géla Babluani's black-and-white thriller, and also appeared in Forgive Me (Pardonnez-moi), Maïwenn's home-movie style drama. In the same year, the physically imposing actor found himself transported back to 1914 France in Fragments of Antonin, and then to 1959 Kabylia in Florent Emilio Siri's Intimate Enemies. In 2008, he starred in Franck Llopis' Paris Nord-Sud and in La Saison des Orphelins. The following year, he was cast in Gilles Béhat's crime thriller Diamant 13 with Gérard Depardieu, and in Denis Dercourt's Tomorrow at Dawn (Demain dès l'aube). He has made appearances in The Horde, directed by Yannick Dahan and Benjamin Rocher, Xavier de Choudens' Joseph and the Girl with Jacques Dutronc, and Léon Desclozeaux's Cargo, the Lost Men in 2010. He appeared in Frédéric Schoendoerffer's Switch, as well as in Olias Barco's Kill Me Please, which won the Marc'Aurelio d'Oro for best film at Rome Film Festival in 2010. He also appeared in Abdellatif Kechiche's Blue is the Warmest Colour, which took the Palme d'Or at Cannes. In 2020 he appeared in Adults in the room. An upcoming appearance is in Grand Ciel an Arte Film. He made his first short film as a director The Rifleman (Un Bon Tireur) which won an Award Winner for Best Drama in 2021. He is developing his first feature film Naked Hands (À Mains Nues) with Sensito Films Productions. Source: Article "Aurélien Recoing" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Birthday: May 05, 1958
September 08, 2021
September 15, 2005
March 07, 2007
September 01, 2005
June 07, 2005
October 22, 2003
October 19, 2022
May 14, 2005
April 21, 2023
August 12, 2009
October 03, 2007
September 10, 2001
October 15, 2003
October 12, 2017
December 08, 2004
February 10, 2010
November 03, 2010
November 25, 2012
June 19, 2001
March 08, 2023
June 11, 2008
July 07, 1993
March 15, 2005
April 05, 2000
June 06, 2011
June 25, 2004
August 06, 2008
January 12, 1994
April 26, 2006
January 19, 2005
November 22, 2006
August 18, 2010
October 09, 2013
August 28, 2003
July 11, 2024
January 28, 2012
April 27, 2005
June 22, 2005
January 24, 2013
January 22, 2013
January 22, 2013
November 08, 2006
August 25, 2022
March 01, 2000
Invalid Date
December 08, 1997
January 07, 2011
December 11, 2006
August 05, 2007
November 04, 1986
October 01, 1986
August 28, 2014
June 17, 2015
November 06, 2004
June 05, 1991
June 21, 2009
May 10, 2017
September 12, 2011
October 11, 2015
June 07, 2017
February 23, 2016
May 31, 1989
November 04, 1993
January 01, 2010
October 17, 2017
October 05, 2018
December 03, 2003
December 19, 1990
October 03, 2019
November 19, 2007
July 11, 2007
March 13, 2004
February 04, 2011
November 23, 2003
January 11, 2006
December 11, 2002
February 01, 2001
February 07, 2009
February 13, 2010
October 21, 1988
December 16, 1988
September 06, 2021