
Alain Mottet (30 December 1928 in Lyon, France – 31 October 2017 in Paris, France) was a French actor.
Alain Mottet appeared in dozens of films, often in secondary roles. He appeared in three films with José Giovanni. In 1965, he played the main role in L'Affaire de la malle à Gouffé. In 1969, in L'Armée des ombres, he was responsible for the prison camp where Lino Ventura, alias Philippe Gerbier, was imprisoned.
For television, he played Flambart, the police officer who chased Eugène François Vidocq relentlessly, played by Bernard Noël in the TV series Vidocq in 1967. He regularly worked with director Abder Isker including on several episodes of Au théâtre ce soir. One of his most notable TV roles was as Shazénian in the fairytale Shéhérazade, shown at the end of 1971: on a flying horse, he walks with Claude Jade into the night sky.
In parallel to his screen career, he also continued to work on stage, most notably in plays by Jean Le Poulain, Roger Planchon, André Barsacq and Georges Wilson. He was part of the cast of the Comédie-Française from 1986 to 1988.
Married to Françoise Hirsch (1930-2017), until his death on 31 October 2017, he is the father of Christine Mottet and actor and musician Pierre Mottet.
Source: Article "Alain Mottet" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.

Army of Shadows
1969 · as Le Commandant du Camp

The Fire Within
1963 · as Urcel

Ho !
1968 · as Paul

Shéhérazade
1971 · as Shazénian

Inspector Blunder
1980 · as Dumeze, police director

Murder on Demand
1977 · as Jacques Lacarène

The Pariah
1972 · as 'Ficelle', henchman of Villanova

Domino
1976 · as Héller

Climates of Love
1962

Le Curé de Tours
1980 · as M. de Bourbonne

Mata Hari, la vraie histoire
2003 · as Me Clunet

L'Affaire Lourdes
1967 · as Jacomet

Last Known Address
1970 · as Frank Lambert, Leonetti's colleague and friend

Venus and Lulu
1991 · as Marceau le comédien

One Way Ticket
1971 · as Nitesse

The Black Indies
1964 · as James Starr

My New Partner II
1990 · as Le préfet

The Night of Saint-Germain-des-Prés
1977 · as Marc Ovet