Acting credits
49
Established
Large and steady acting portfolio.

Acting
These indicators come from TMDB. They are relative signals, not review ratings.
Acting credits
49
Established
Large and steady acting portfolio.
TMDB popularity
0.4
Low visibility
TMDB internal trend index. Higher usually means more searches and page activity now.
TMDB ID: 64215
IMDb ID: nm0762240
Known for: Acting
Born: August 17, 1946
Age: 79
Place of birth: Paris, France
Gender: Male
Adult content flag: No
Career span: 1981 - 2026
Years active: 46
Average TMDB rating: 6.36
Wikidata: Q3027186
Also known as
Didier Maffre
Didier Maffre, known professionally as Didier Sandre, is a French actor and stage director born in Paris on 17 August 1946 and appointed sociétaire of the Comédie‑Française in 2020. He made his debut in 1968 in Paul Claudel’s L’Échange and, from the 1970s onward, became a prominent figure in public theatre, collaborating with major directors such as Catherine Dasté, Bernard Sobel, Jorge Lavelli, Patrice Chéreau, Giorgio Strehler, Luc Bondy, and Antoine Vitez. Alongside this, he has appeared regularly in private‑theatre productions, including works by Claudel, Anouilh, Rampal, and Margulies. His stage career includes notable performances in Bérénice (directed by Lambert Wilson), Le Laboureur de Bohême (Christian Schiaretti), and Monsieur chasse! by Feydeau. He joined the Comédie‑Française in 2013 and became a full member in 2020. Sandre has also worked extensively in film and television, appearing in Pascale Ferran’s Petits Arrangements avec les morts, Éric Rohmer’s Autumn Tale, Abraham Segal’s Le Mystère Paul, and Mikhaël Hers’s Memory Lane. On television, he has acted in numerous dramas, including Saint‑Germain ou la Négociation, Le Sang noir, and notably portrayed Louis XIV in Nina Companeez’s L’Allée du Roi and the Baron de Charlus in her adaptation of In Search of Lost Time. A frequent narrator in concert settings, he has performed in major repertoire works by Stravinsky, Debussy, Beethoven, Honegger, Haydn, Prokofiev, Grieg, Poulenc, and others, collaborating with leading orchestras, conductors such as Pierre Boulez and Myung‑Whun Chung, and renowned soloists including Alexandre Tharaud, Abdel Rahman El Bacha, and Emmanuelle Bertrand.


Movie credits linked with Didier Sandre.
as Don Diègue
as Don Pélage/Le second chancelier
as Amon / Duc et Chambellan (voice)
as Jean
as Narrator (voice)
as Narrator
as General Boisdeffre
as Tyndare
as Capulet
as Philippe's Father
as Le Comte, père d'Hortense
as Géronte
as de Guiche
as Joachim von Essenbeck
as Daniel Launey
as Narrator (voice)
as Le père de Clément
as Guillaume Casseul
as Le psychiatre
as Uriel
as Le procureur Lacourt
as François
as Martin
as Serge