
Line Noro
Biography
Aline Simone Noro, known as Line Noro, born February 22, 1900 in Houdelaincourt (Meuse) and died November 4, 1985 in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, is a French actress. Line Noro is the granddaughter of the communard couple Jean-Baptiste and Émilie Noro, originally from Lyon. In the theatre, Line Noro has notably worked with Jacques Copeau, Charles Dullin and Louis Jouvet. For more than twenty years, she was a resident of the Comédie-Française (from 1945 to 1966). Actress of composition roles, also specializing in "weeping roles", she played in the cinema in about fifty films between 1928 and 1956, among which: "Pépé le Moko" by Julien Duvivier (1937), "Goupi Mains Rouges " by Jacques Becker (1943), "La Symphonie Pastorale" by Jean Delannoy (1946) or even "Meurtres?" by Richard Pottier (1950). Line Noro was the wife of director André Berthomieu (died in 1960). Due to sight problems, she left the stage and the screens in the 1960s. She died in 1985 following a long illness.
Filmography

Le cardinal d'Espagne

Les Truands

Before the Deluge

Inside a Girls' Dormitory

The Road to Damascus

We Are All Murderers

The Lovers of Bras-Mort

Three Sinners

The Story of Dr. Louise

Eternal Conflict

La Grande Volière

The Lost Village

Pastoral Symphony

Behind These Walls

Blind Desire

Girl with Grey Eyes

L'Enquête du 58

The Bride of Darkness

Vautrin the Thief

Ceux du rivage

The Secret of Madame Clapain

It Happened at the Inn

The Count of Monte Cristo Part 1 - The Prisoner of Kastell

La Neige sur les pas

La Prière aux étoiles

The Well-Digger's Daughter

Dédé la musique

My Crimes After Mein Kampf

Street Without Joy

Ramuntcho

I Accuse

L'Île des veuves

A Woman of No Importance

Pépé le Moko

The Flame

The Land That Dies

Justin de Marseille

Le Petit Jacques

Dernière heure

L’Or

At the End of the World

L'Assommoir

A Man's Neck

Mater Dolorosa

Faubourg Montmartre

The Divine Voyage
