
Birthday: March 15, 1921
Death: January 07, 1997
Jacques d’Ovidio was a French film and theatre set designer, a discreet yet essential figure of popular cinema from the 1960s to the 1980s. Born in Philippeville (now Skikda, in Algeria), he trained in set design before becoming a long‑standing member of French film crews. He worked on many notable films, collaborating with Georges Lautner, Georges Franju, Christian‑Jaque, Claude Confortès, and Patrice Leconte, for whom he created the sets of Les Bronzés (1978) and Les Bronzés font du ski (1979). His filmography reflects great versatility: comedies, political films, dramas, auteur cinema, and mainstream productions. Alongside his film work, he also designed sets for the theatre, notably for several productions by Robert Hossein, including Julius Caesar (1985) and L’Affaire du courrier de Lyon (1987). Jacques d’Ovidio died in 1997 in Créteil, leaving behind a solid and varied body of work, representative of the craftsmanship of the great French set designers of his era.

March 27, 1963

November 27, 1963

December 10, 1964

February 09, 1968

January 07, 1976

August 20, 1975

January 08, 1986

December 30, 1972

February 26, 1969

November 07, 1952

January 25, 1959

April 12, 1967

July 01, 1986

November 11, 1978

April 30, 1974

October 28, 1964

January 26, 1972

February 25, 1966

September 22, 1976

November 22, 1979

September 02, 1959

May 31, 1968

February 27, 1953