Pascale Petit
Pascale Petit (not to be mistaken for the poet of that name, born in 1953) hailed from Paris and was 'discovered' while working as a hairdresser in a Carita salon by Françoise Lugagne, the actress-wife of director Raymond Rouleau. Rouleau proceeded to direct Petit's screen debut as Mary Warren, erstwhile accuser at the Salem witch trials of 1692 and later confessed 'witch', in Les sorcières de Salem (1957). Despite having no formal acting training, she made an indelible impression with back-to-back performances in Marcel Carné's film, Les tricheurs (1958) and in Alexandre Astruc's Une vie (1958) (as the servant girl Rosalie). Her performance won her a coveted Prix Suzanne Bianchetti as Most Promising Young Actress of 1958. She followed up her success with a title role in the comedy Julie la rousse (1959) and a co-starring role along Micheline Presle in Julie la rousse (1959).
During the following decade, Petit was seen predominantly in German and Italian co-productions. She portrayed Cleopatra during the internecine struggles with her brother Ptolemy in Una regina per Cesare (1962) and helped American super spy Ray Danton foil a Soviet plot in Corrida pour un espion (1965) (her then-relationship with Danton resulted in the birth of a daughter, though she was married at the time to singer/songwriter and actor Giani Esposito). She next joined Stewart Granger, Lex Barker and Pierre Brice in the lacklustre Gern hab' ich die Frauen gekillt (1966) and helped American agent Darren McGavin track down a traitor in the above-average espionage thriller Berlin Affair (1970), set in Berlin at the height of the Cold War.
With fewer decent film roles coming her way in the 70s and 80's, Petit turned her attention towards acting in French television series and made-for-TV movies, but failed to recapture the success of her early career. She published her memoirs in 2022, entitled 'Une vie sans tricher' (A Life without Cheating).