Acting credits
43
Established
Large and steady acting portfolio.

Acting
These indicators come from TMDB. They are relative signals, not review ratings.
Acting credits
43
Established
Large and steady acting portfolio.
TMDB popularity
1.1
Low visibility
TMDB internal trend index. Higher usually means more searches and page activity now.
TMDB ID: 9763
IMDb ID: nm0656180
Known for: Acting
Born: December 13, 1927
Died: February 14, 2025
Age: 97
Place of birth: Paris, France
Gender: Female
Adult content flag: No
Career span: 1950 - 2003
Years active: 54
Average TMDB rating: 6.27
Wikidata: Q451567
Also known as
Женевьева Паж • Geneviève Bonjean • Genevieve Page
Geneviève Bonjean (13 December 1927 – 14 February 2025), known professionally as Geneviève Page, was a French actress with a film career spanning fifty years and also numerous English-speaking film productions. She was the daughter of French art collector Jacques Paul Bonjean (1899–1990). Page was born in Paris on 13 December 1927, to a family of aesthetes, like her father Jacques Bonjean, who collected art from 17th century France, and her mother Germaine (born Lipman) Bonjean. Her mother's family was Jewish, and had founded LIP. At the age of six, her godfather Christian Dior played the piano with Page's mother, and talked to Page about talking to adults. She recalls, "He had no money at the time, and drew hats for big houses. He had lunch every other day at home and played the piano, with my mother in my room, with four hands. I took refuge in the bathroom to learn my lessons." At the age of twelve, Page read some works by Voltaire, and to her mother's surprise, her father replied "If she can't read Voltaire, she can't read anyone." Despite this, she was a very talented young girl, playing Musset at Théâtre National Populaire and entering the Conservatory. Her film début was in Pas de pitié pour les femmes (1951), followed by Fanfan la Tulipe (1952), in which she played Madame de Pompadour alongside Gérard Philipe and Gina Lollobrigida. Later, she appeared in Italian, French, British, and American films. She co-starred with Robert Mitchum and Ingrid Thulin in Foreign Intrigue (1956), Dirk Bogarde and Capucine in Song Without End (1960), Charlton Heston and Sophia Loren in El Cid (1961), and was seen in Grand Prix (1966) with James Garner, and Belle de Jour (1967), with Catherine Deneuve and directed by Luis Buñuel. She appeared with Deneuve again when she played Countess Larisch in Mayerling (1968), also co-starring with Ava Gardner and James Mason. Billy Wilder cast her as the mysterious widow in The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes (1970) because the character she played used her sex appeal to manipulate Holmes. She appeared in Robert Altman's Beyond Therapy (1987) and continued to act until 2003. She acted in 1943 in Le Soulier de Satin and in Oh! Les Beaux Jours, both of which were directed by Jean-Louis Barrault Madeleine Renaud Co. Her theatre career continued in the 1980s and 1990s, with Les larmes amères de Petra von Kant (The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant) (1980), La nuit des rois (Twelfth Night, William Shakespeare), La femme sur le lit (The Woman on the Bed, Franco Brusati) 1994, and Delicate Balance (1998). Page was educated at École du Louvre and Conservatoire national des arts et métiers. Page was married to Jean-Claude Bujard from 1959 until his death on 29 August 2011; the couple had two children. In an interview from 2013, she said she was having stewardship problems in her house and that she was "not used to talking anymore". Page died in Paris on 14 February 2025, at the age of 97.








Movie credits linked with Geneviève Page.
as Martha Loncle
as Jeanne
as Alice
as Bernadette
as Simone
as Nathalie Dupin
as Zizi
as Mrs. Schmitt-Boulanger
as Geneviève Léonard
as Béatrice de St-Mérand
as Evremont
as Karen Sandler
as Gabrielle Valadon
as Lady Butler
as Countess Marie Larisch von Moennich
as Margot Beste-Chetwynde
as Madame Anais
as Monique Delvaux-Sarti
as Béatrice Dumonceaux
as Yolande Combes
as Geneviève des Vallières
as Frieda Winter
as Ursula Keller
as Agathe
Series credits linked with Geneviève Page.