The French actor Jean-Louis Trintignant made among his early films Roger Vadim’s …And God Created Woman (1956) with Brigitte Bardot as co-star, but became prominent internationally in 1966 with Claude Lelouch’s A Man and a Woman. In 1969 he won the Best Actor award at the Cannes Film Festival for his performance in the Costa-Gavras political drama Z. He was photographed for Vogue on February 27, 1970 for a “People Are Talking About …” feature. Vogue notes Trintignant’s “offhand manner and dead-on grey eyes” have won over American women”; “in spite of the fact he has never played a part in English.” “To the tough deadpan accuracy of Humphrey Bogart” Trintignant “adds a smile that shoots across his eyes with startling accuracy, a grin that pounces in for the kill.”