This pert, petite, delicate, dreamy-eyed French dish of post-war filming with the piled-high blonde hairdo was a one-time threat to the sexy, kittenish pedestal
Brigitte Bardot stood on during the 1950s. While working for such legendary directors as
Marcel Carné,
Marc Allégret,
Julien Duvivier,
Henri Decoin and
René Clair, she also got to work opposite France's most handsome leading men, including
Georges Marchal,
Jean Marais,
Jean Servais,
François Périer,
Daniel Gélin,
Jacques Sernas and singer
Marcel Amont, Dany became the epitome of the romantic, virginal heroine in light comedy souffles, although she was just as entrancing and touching in dramatic works.
Born Danielle Robin on April 4, 1927, the lithe Dany trained as a ballerina as a child and eventually made her way dancing with the Opera de Paris. At age 19, however, she opted for a movie career and decided to study at the Paris Conservatoire. Making her screen debut with a bit part in
Lunegarde (1946), she first turned heads in the romantic dramedy
Man About Town (1947) directed by Clair and starring
Maurice Chevalier.
Dany continued to touch pulses with her naïve lovelies throughout the 50's with such pictures as
Naughty Martine (1947);
Monelle (1948); four films co-starring heartthrob
Georges Marchal, whom she married in 1951 --
La passagère (1949),
La voyageuse inattendue (1950),
The Thirst of Men (1950) and
Valley of Fire (1951);
Elle et moi (1952);
Deux sous de violettes (1951);
Frou-Frou (1955); the title role in the films
Holiday for Henrietta (1952) and
Julietta (1953); the US/French co-production
Act of Love (1953) starring
Kirk Douglas;
Napoleon (1955) (as Desiree);
Frou-Frou (1955);
Maid in Paris (1956);
C'est arrivé à Aden... (1956);
Bonsoir Paris (1956);
C'est la faute d'Adam (1957);
L'école des cocottes (1958); the title role in
Mimi Pinson (1958); and
The Chasers (1959).
Though most of her films were produced in her own homeland, Dany branched out internationally from time to time in the 1960's, appearing in the British sex comedy
Waltz of the Toreadors (1962) opposite
Peter Sellers and the innocuous, teen-oriented flick
Follow the Boys (1963) starring singing teen pop idol
Connie Francis here in the U.S. She matured with roles in
Love and the Frenchwoman (1960),
Les mystères de Paris (1962),
Mandrin (1962),
X-Ray of a Killer (1965) and a pair of British comedies
Carry on Don't Lose Your Head (1967) and
The Best House in London (1969). She would last appear on film in the
Alfred Hitchcock thriller
Topaz (1969), an American production.
Divorced from first husband Marchal, the father of her two children, in 1968, Dany married British agent/producer Michael Sullivan the following year and retired quietly. On May 25, 1995, the 68-year-old former actress was tragically killed, along with Sullivan, in a fire that consumed their Paris apartment.