Marc Cassot: Difference between revisions
mNo edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
| (One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{disambig3|Mark|Marc}} | {{disambig3|Mark|Marc}} | ||
[[File:Marc CASSOT.jpg|230px|thumb|"And then they told me I was about to voice a firetruck robot from space"]] | [[File:Marc CASSOT.jpg|230px|thumb|"And then they told me I was about to voice a firetruck robot from space"]] | ||
'''Marc Cassot''' ([[June 16]], [[1923]] - [[January 21]], [[2016]]) was a French actor and director. | '''Marc Cassot''' ([[June 16]], [[1923]] - [[January 21]], [[2016]]) was a French actor, director and voice director. | ||
During his 70 years-long career, he participated in numerous theater plays, films and TV series. | During his 70 years-long career, he participated in numerous theater plays, films and TV series. | ||
In addition to this, he also made a lot of dubbing since the 50s, having been the regular voice of Paul Newman and Philip Baker Hall. | In addition to this, he also made a lot of dubbing since the 50s, having been the regular voice of Paul Newman and Philip Baker Hall and one of the occasional voices of Steve McQueen and Christopher Lee. He was also the voice of Adam West's [[Batman]]. | ||
He | He dubbed both Michael Gambon and Richard Harris as Dumbledore in the ''Harry Potter'' saga (keeping a voice continuity for French audiences), Ian Holm as Bilbo Baggins in the ''Lord of the Rings'' and ''Hobbit'' films and Cliff Robertson as Uncle Ben in the original ''Spider-Man'' trilogy, among various other voice roles in cinema, animation and TV series. | ||
In animation, he notably dubbed Preston B. Whitmore in ''Atlantis: The Lost Empire'' and its sequel, Iroh in ''Avatar: The Last Airbender'', Ramsis Dendup in ''Star Wars: The Clone Wars'' and Hovis in ''The Tale of Despereaux''. | |||
He also directed several French dubbings, including ''Saturday Night Fever'', ''The Blues Brothers'', ''Footloose'' and the first two ''Indiana Jones'' films. | |||
==Voice roles== | ==Voice roles== | ||
| Line 14: | Line 18: | ||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
* Marc Cassot was chosen to dub Sentinel Prime because he dubbed [[Leonard Nimoy]] as Spock in the 2009 ''[[Star Trek]]'' movie. The Canadian French dub did the same, casting [[Jean Brousseau]] as Sentinel Prime. | * Marc Cassot was most likely chosen to dub Sentinel Prime because he dubbed [[Leonard Nimoy]] as Spock in the 2009 ''[[Star Trek]]'' movie. The Canadian French dub did the same, casting [[Jean Brousseau]] as Sentinel Prime. | ||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
Latest revision as of 19:52, 18 March 2026
| The name or term "Marc" refers to more than one character or idea. For a list of other meanings, see Mark (disambiguation). |

Marc Cassot (June 16, 1923 - January 21, 2016) was a French actor, director and voice director.
During his 70 years-long career, he participated in numerous theater plays, films and TV series.
In addition to this, he also made a lot of dubbing since the 50s, having been the regular voice of Paul Newman and Philip Baker Hall and one of the occasional voices of Steve McQueen and Christopher Lee. He was also the voice of Adam West's Batman.
He dubbed both Michael Gambon and Richard Harris as Dumbledore in the Harry Potter saga (keeping a voice continuity for French audiences), Ian Holm as Bilbo Baggins in the Lord of the Rings and Hobbit films and Cliff Robertson as Uncle Ben in the original Spider-Man trilogy, among various other voice roles in cinema, animation and TV series.
In animation, he notably dubbed Preston B. Whitmore in Atlantis: The Lost Empire and its sequel, Iroh in Avatar: The Last Airbender, Ramsis Dendup in Star Wars: The Clone Wars and Hovis in The Tale of Despereaux.
He also directed several French dubbings, including Saturday Night Fever, The Blues Brothers, Footloose and the first two Indiana Jones films.
Voice roles
[edit]Transformers: Dark of the Moon
[edit]Notes
[edit]- Marc Cassot was most likely chosen to dub Sentinel Prime because he dubbed Leonard Nimoy as Spock in the 2009 Star Trek movie. The Canadian French dub did the same, casting Jean Brousseau as Sentinel Prime.
External links
[edit]- Wikipedia entry (French)
- IMDb entry

