Anne Bourguignon, known as Anemone, is a French actress and screenwriter, born August 9, 1950 in Paris 15th from the marriage of André Bourguignon, psychiatrist, and Claire Justin-Besançon, and died April 30, 2019 in Poitiers (Vienne). She won the César for best actress in 1988 for the role of Marcelle in Le Grand Chemin. She is the mother of two children; Jacob and Lilly.
She spent her childhood at Château Mauras, a family property in Bommes, in Gironde. After primary and secondary studies at the Sainte-Marie-des-Invalides school (today Paul Claudel-d'Hulst), at the Victor-Duruy high school, at the Gaudéchaux course, at the Jaillard course, at the Sévigné college, within the congregation of the canonesses of Saint-Augustin of the Congrégation Notre-Dame (at the Notre-Dame-des-Oiseaux convent in Megève, at the Saint-Pierre Fourier institute in Brunoy) and at the Institut Notre-Dame in Épernay, it pursued higher education at Paris-III University and then at Paris-X1 University. Anemone began her career at the café-théâtre with the Splendid troupe. She takes her pseudonym from the first film in which she shot, Anemone by Philippe Garrel. It was Coluche who offered her her first big role in the cinema in You will not have Alsace and Lorraine in 1977. In 1979, she created on stage the play written by the Splendid troupe, Le Père Noël est une junk . Her role as Thérèse earned her great success with the public, a success confirmed and amplified by the adaptation of the play to the cinema, directed by Jean-Marie Poiré.
In the 1980s, she was a very popular actress who starred in many comedies: "Ma Femme S'Appelle Reviens", "Les Babas-Cool", "Pour Cent Briques, T'As Plus Rien"..., "Le Quart d'Heure Américain", and "Le Mariage Du Siècle", for which she wrote most of the screenplay. Michel Deville (Peril in the home, Aux petits bonheurs), then Jean-Loup Hubert offered her more serious roles from 1985. Successful counter-jobs, since she won the César for best actress for "Le Grand Chemin" in 1988. More discreet in the 1990s, Anemone worked with Tonie Marshall ("Pas Très Catholique", "Enfants De Bastard"), Romain Goupil ("Mom") or Christine Pascal, in "Le Petit Prince A Dit". In 1996, she played in the adaptation of Binet's comic strip, "Les Bidochon". In 2010, she returned to the cinema with the film "Les Amours Secrètes" by Franck Phelizon. She then turned to the theater, playing in "L'Avare" for Roger Planchon, "Mademoiselle Werner" at the Théâtre des Variétés or "Les Noeuds Au Mouchoir" at the Palais des Glaces which she announced would be her last play at the end of 2017.
In December 2017, she announced that she would definitely end her career at the end of the year, and also took a very critical and disillusioned look in this same interview at what has become of the world in general, and that of show- bizz in particular. Militant like her brother for a return to a more ethical and ecological society, Anemone chooses to live in the countryside in the small village of Sainte-Soline (Deux-Sèvres), near Lezay.
Anemone died on April 30, 2019 at the age of 68 in Poitiers (Vienne) from lung cancer. She admitted to being an “inveterate smoker”. Her funeral took place on May 9 in Poitiers, where she was cremated.
2022
as Self (archive footage)
2018
as Bertille
2016
as Simone Machot
2015
as Madame Abramovitch
2015
as La grand-mère
2014
as Marion Boucher
2014
as Louise
2014
as La générale Bubunne XVI
2013
as Mrs. Spinelli
2013
as Dr. Vorov
2013
as Mrs. Lesoufache
2012
as Mathilde
2012
as Narrator (voice)
2011
as Widow who killed her husband
2010
as Mme Chambart-Martin
2010
as Mrs. Menou
2010
as Margot
2009
as Mlle Navarin
2009
as Simone
2008
as Tata Louise
2007
as Mme Fernet
2006
as Françoise Darcy
2006
as la mère de Mathias
2006
as Marie
2005
as Léonce
2005
as Madame Gonzalés
2005
as Self
2004
as Carlotta Luciani
2002
as Claire Trouaballe
2001
as Anémone
1999
as Solange
1998
as Comtesse Adèle de Toulouse-Lautrec
1998
as Self (archive footage)
1997
as La Voisin
1997
as Clara
1996
as Cécile
1996
as Raymonde Bidochon
1996
as Sylvette
1996
as Jeanine, la juge
1995
as Self
1994
as Maxime Chabrier
1994
as Hélène
1993
as Anne
1992
as Laura Bécancour
1992
as Melanie
1992
as Juliette
1992
as Mme Desjardins
1991
1990
as Isabelle
1990
as Lulu
1989
as Woman in the orange dress at the Césars ceremony
1989
as Marianne
1989
as Minouchette
1988
as Rose
1988
as Isabelle Fournier
1987
as Marcelle
1987
as Béatrice
1986
as Barbara
1985
as Princess Charlotte
1985
as Edwige Ledieu
1985
as Cécile / Hélène
1985
as Odile
1985
as Thérèse
1983
1982
as Bonnie
1982
as Thérèse de Monsou dite « Mme S.O.S »
1982
as Nicole, publiciste pour établissements bancaires
1982
as Nadine
1981
as Alexandra
1981
as Self
1981
1981
as Anaïs
1981
as Adrienne
1980
1980
as Liliane
1980
as Marie-Annick
1979
as Marie-Ghyslaine
1979
as Christine
1978
as La scripte
1978
as Colette
1977
as La cousine Lucienne
1977
as Josée
1977
as Claudine
1976
as Concierge
1976
as Une secrétaire
1976
as Eva
1975
as Prostitute (uncredited)
1973
as La deuxième candidate au poste de nounou
1970
1968
as Anémone
1958
as Thérèse
1958
as Nadine