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Patrick Bauchau

Personal Profile

Patrick Bauchau
  • Birth Name:
    Patrick Nicolas Jean Sixte Ghislain Bauchau
  • Date of Birth:
    December 6, 1938
  • Zodiac Sign:
    Sagittarius
  • Place of Birth:
    Brussels, Belgium
  • Height:
    6' 3"
  • Sex:
    Male
  • Hair Color:
    White
  • Eye Color:
    Blue
  • Nationality:
    Belgian
  • Education:
    Oxford University

Family

Patrick Bauchau
  • Father:
    Henry Bauchau
  • Mother:
    Mary
  • Spouse:
    Mijanou Bardot
  • Daughter:
    Camille

Career

Patrick Bauchau

Trivia

Patrick Bauchau
  • Today Bauchau is better known for his roles in American television.
  • His last name is pronounced "beau-show".
  • His father, noted writer Henry Bauchau (1913- ), served in the Belgian underground during the war, ran a publishing company and was the head of a finishing school in Switzerland. His mother, the late Mary Kozyrev, expatriated from Russia and at one time ran both the publishing company and the finishing school.
  • Patrick speaks French, English, German, Spanish and Italian, and also knows a bit of Flemish and Russian.
  • Patrick took a break from acting during which time he built furniture and created large stuffed-animal pillows for Salvadore Dali.
  • He was a member of jury at the Mar del Plata International Film Festival in 2005.
  • Patrick Bauchau is a Belgian actor.

Biography

Patrick Bauchau
Last Updated: Thursday, October 22, 2009

PatrickOf Russian-Belgian heritage, Patrick Bauchau cut a dashingly handsome, urbane figure on screen in leading and supporting roles. Tall, with striking looks and a lightly-accented, deep voice, he first made a splash right out of Oxford when cast by Eric Rohmer in "La Collectionneuse" (1967) as part of a romantic triangle. Although the film should have launched his career, he and his co-stars were dismissed as real-life quintessential hippies who had allowed themselves to be used by the director. Bauchau did find a second role in the little seen Spanish film "Tuset Street" (1968), but his subsequent diagnosis with hepatitis lend to his dropping out of acting for several years. In the interim, he variously worked as a journalist (contributing to FILM CULTURE) and crafted furniture, pillows and stuffed animals for famed artist Salvador Dali.

Resuming his career with a role opposite Delphine Seyrig in a French made-for-TV-movie, Bauchau returned to the big screen in 1980 in "Guns". A more significant part in Wim Wenders' "The State of Things" (1982), a behind-the-scenes story of a movie crew remaking Roger Corman's "The Day the World Ended" in Portugal, boosted his stock. Lending his unique cosmopolitan charms to a multitude of roles in several languages in films of varying quality, the actor remained constantly employed. He made an impression as the hapless spouse of Miou-Miou in Diane Kurys' "Entre Nous" (1983) and as a French gangster in his American debut in Alan Rudolph's "Choose Me" (1984).

PatrickBut for every "A View to a Kill" (1985), there was a "Creepers" (also 1985), for every decent supporting role (e.g., the cuckolded husband in "Australia" 1989), there was another that made critics and audiences scratch their collective heads (i.e., "Every Breath" 1994). Writer-director Michael Tolkin offered Bauchau interesting roles as the amoral boyfriend dumped by Mimi Rogers in "The Rapture" (1991) and as a spiritual guide to an upscale couple in "The New Age" (1994). He offered strong performances as an outspoken gay priest in the Brazilian film "Jenipapo/The Interview" and a filmmaker whose disappearance sets off a chain of events in Wenders' "Lisbon Story" (both 1995).

The debonair actor also made inroads in American television with featured roles in the miniseries "Christopher Columbus" (CBS, 1985) and "Kane & Abel" (CBS, 1985). Bauchau appeared in a modern-day vampire story "Blood Ties" (Fox, 1991) that in some ways was a warm-up for his first regular series role, as the head of a contemporary family of the undead in the short-lived 1996 Fox series "Kindred: The Embraced". Later that fall, he accepted perhaps his best-known role, Dr. Sydney Green, the scientist who nurtured gifted children including Jarod, the titular character, in "The Pretender" (NBC, 1996-2000). Bauchau lent his distinctive flair to the character who functions as a surrogate father to Michael T Weiss' Jarod, creating a rarity for American TV, a multi-dimensional, ambiguous figure who combines charisma with a hint of danger, a complicated person who has been morally compromised.

Filmography

Patrick Bauchau

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