Julie-Marie Parmentier


Julie-Marie Parmentier is a French actress.
She began practising theater at nine years old, in her natal town.
At the age of fifteen, she played in her first feature film, Petites, by Noémie Lvovsky. Since then, she has worked with many important directors.
She garnered critical acclaim for her roles in films such as Les Blessures Assassines by Jean-Pierre Denis, Charly by Isild Le Besco and No et moi by Zabou Breitman. She has been nominated for the César Award for Most Promising Actress for her role in Les Blessures Assassines and for which she won a Best Actress Award at the Mar del Plata Film Festival. She has also appeared in such films as Sheitan by Kim Shapiron, Around a Small Mountain by Jacques Rivette and Les Adieux à la reine by Benoît Jacquot.
She is also a famous actress on stage. She has collabored for more than ten years with André Engel, for who she played, among others, Cordelia in King Lear along Michel Piccoli, and Catherine in La petite Catherine de Heilbronn.
Julie-Marie worked at the Comédie-Française, where she was praised for Agnès in L'école des Femmes and Camille in On ne badine pas avec l'amour.
She won the Jean-Jacques Gauthier prize for Best Drama Actress for her monologue La séparation des songes by Jean Delabroy directed by Michel Didym.

Selected filmography

Literature

Julie-Marie Parmentier has always been impassioned with English language. She learnt it to be able to read, speak and write in English.
She has also been learning Chinese.
In 2014, she wrote a children book Les aventures de Pip-Pip le moineau published at the Éditions L'Harmattan. Since then, she has written many novels.

YouTube Channel

In 2019, Julie-Marie launched her theater channel on YouTube : which she sees as an artistic experiment and performance. She does everything by herself, she writes some of the texts and plays poems in English.
She has a French channel, , where she tells story for children and the history of theater. She plays monologues and various scenes.

Awards and nominations

Awards