
Odette Joyeux (5 December 1914 – 26 August 2000) was a French actress, playwright and novelist.
She was born in Paris, where she studied dance at the Paris Opera Ballet before taking the stage. Joyeux started her film career in 1931. Her first notable film was Marc Allégret's Entrée des artistes (1938). During the 1940s she established herself as one of France's most popular cinema actresses; however, she made few film appearances after the 1950s.
Joyeux is the author of some plays and essays on dance as well as a book on the life of inventor Nicéphore Niépce. She also wrote two novels aimed to inspire dance: L'Âge heureux (which was adapted to a television series) and Côté jardin. Additionally, Joyeux wrote The Bride Is Much Too Beautiful (1956) (adapted to film).
She married actor Pierre Brasseur from 1935 until their divorce in 1945, by whom she had one child, Claude Brasseur, who is the father of Alexandre Brasseur.
In 1958 she married director Philippe Agostini. They remained married until her death in Grimaud, Var, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, France from stroke at age 85.
Source: Article "Odette Joyeux" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.

Douce
1943 · as Douce

Grisou
1938 · as Madeleine

La Ronde
1950 · as Anna, la grisette

Love Letters
1942 · as Zélie Fontaine

The Phantom Baron
1943 · as Elfy

Passionnelle
1947 · as Thérèse de Marsannes

Le Chant de l'amour
1935 · as Tote

Saint-Tropez, devoirs de vacances
1954 · as Self

Une femme qui se partage
1937

Driving Lesson
1946 · as Micheline

If Paris Were Told to Us
1956 · as La Passementière

La Bonne Peinture
1967 · as Narrator (voice)

Jean of the Moon
1931

Ladies Lake
1934 · as Carla Lyssenhop

Une femme a menti
1930

The Little Ones of the Flower Platform
1944 · as Rosine Grimaud

Le secret du docteur
1930 · as Suzy

The Curtain Rises
1938 · as Cécilia Prieur