Raphael Fejtö
Raphaël Fejtö (born September 17, 1974) is a French actor, director, and author. He is most famous for co-starring in Louis Malle's semi-autobiographical 1987 motion picture Au revoir, les enfants (Goodbye, Children).
Fejtö is of Russian, Egyptian, and Lebanese ancestry. His grandfather was Ferenc Fejtő, a famous Hungarian historian and journalist.
His primary acting credit is in Au revoir, les enfants. He also wrote, directed, and starred in the 1996 short film 56 fois par semaine (56 Times A Week). He wrote and directed the French-language film Osmose (Osmosis) in 2003. His second motion picture, L'Age D'Homme (The Age of Man, which he also wrote), starred Romain Duris, Aïssa Maïga, and Clément Sibony and was released in 2007.
He is also the co-author and illustrator (with his mother, Nadja) of several children's books. Among these are Le Vélo de Jo (Jo's Bicycle), Petit George (Little George), and Roro le Pompier (Roro the Fireman).
Description above from the Wikipedia article Raphaël Fejtö, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Known For
Directing
Born
1974-09-17
Place of Birth
Paris, France