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See full list on quentin-tarantino.fandom.com As a child she used to watch Woody Allen 's early movies together with her mother. Tarantino's unique storytelling style and his ability to blend various genres and influences made him a celebrated figure in the film industry. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Julie Dreyfus. This article is about the French actress.

Julie Dreyfus

French actress

This article is about the French actress. For the American actress, see Julia Louis-Dreyfus.

Julie Dreyfus

Dreyfus in

Born () 24 January (age&#;58)

Paris, France

OccupationActress

Julie Dreyfus (born 24 January ) is a French actress who is well known in Japan, where she made her television debut on a French language lesson program on NHK's educational channel in the late s.

She has appeared on the TV show Ryōri no Tetsujin (Iron Chef) as a guest and judge. She is best known to western audiences for her appearances in the Quentin Tarantino films Kill Bill: Volume 1 and Inglourious Basterds, in which she played Sofie Fatale and Francesca Mondino respectively.

Sophie tarantino biography As of now, Tarantino has directed nine feature films, with plans for a final project, seeking to maintain the high standard of his celebrated career while contemplating retirement. Contents move to sidebar hide. Before his marriage to Daniella , Tarantino had several notable relationships. He disliked school and dropped out at the age of 15, working as a ticket usher in a porn theater during the day and attending acting classes in the evenings.

Aside from her native French, she is fluent in English, German and Japanese.

Early life

Dreyfus was born and raised in Paris, the only child of actress Pascale Audret and producer Francis Dreyfus. Her father was of Romanian Jewish and Alsatian Jewish ancestry, and her mother was of French descent.

She spent her summers in the UK. As a child she used to watch Woody Allen's early movies together with her mother.[1] She started learning Japanese in at the Institute for Oriental Languages and Civilisation at the University of Paris, after studying interior design and becoming interested in Japanese architecture. She moved to Japan to study at the Osaka University of Foreign Studies for a six-month, intensive Japanese course, thinking that she would eventually land a job in interior design.[2] After finishing the course, she moved to Tokyo working part-time in a design studio while continuing her private Japanese lessons.

See full list on quentin-tarantino.fandom.com Fact-checking and Ethical Concerns We assure our audience that we will remove any contents that are not accurate or according to formal reports and queries if they are justified. He also took small acting roles during this period and began writing scripts. Tarantino gained significant recognition with his directorial debut, Reservoir Dogs , which established him as a prominent figure in independent cinema. His real education, however, came from his time working at Video Archives, a video rental store in Manhattan Beach, California, where he immersed himself in a vast range of films, from Hollywood classics to international cinema.

In , she worked as a French language instructor on the NHK morning-television-educational program. Centering on a mystery drama, chief producer Motoyoshi Sei hired Dreyfus to increase ratings by changing the program into an episode format.[3] Eventually, she was cast by Japanese network executives as the twenty-something beauty in several TV and film roles, leading her to become a gaijin tarento (foreign talent).

She was also a judge on the cult-hit cooking show Ryōri no Tetsujin (Iron Chef).

Film career

Dreyfus portrayed the character of Sofie Fatale in Quentin Tarantino's film, Kill Bill Volume 1. She was a member of the Gérardmer Film Festival (Festival international du film fantastique de Gérardmer), which honored her Kill Bill co-star David Carradine.[4][5]

Dreyfus appeared in Vinyan in and in Tarantino's war epic Inglourious Basterds in , as Francesca Mondino, a fictional French interpreter and mistress for Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels.[6] She also appeared as a translator in the Leos Carax segment entitled "Merde" in the feature film Tokyo!

Filmography

References

External links