
Age: 37
female
Nora Arnezeder is a French actress and singer. Arnezeder was born in Paris, France. Her father, Wolfgang, is Austrian and Catholic, and her mother, Piera, is an Egyptian Jew. At the age of two, she left Paris with her parents for Aix-en-Provence. When she was fourteen, she moved to Bali for a year and, once back in Paris, studied dancing and singing. Her first major role was in 2008, in Paris 36 (French: Faubourg 36), which was directed by Christophe Barratier. In this film, Nora Arnezeder sang "Loin de Paname", which was nominated for Best Original Song at the 82nd Academy Awards. In 2009, she was the face of Guerlain's fragrance "L'Idylle". In 2012, Arnezeder appeared in the films Safe House, with Ryan Reynolds, and, as Celia, in The Words, opposite Ben Barnes. Arnezeder also starred in the horror slasher film Maniac alongside Elijah Wood.

Nora Arnezeder

Anna Delambre
for Anna Delambre in Waiting For Adolphe
Suggested by sepanta_kazemi

A cozy dinner among lifelong friends is thrown into chaos when Vincent Leprince, charming, confident, and soon to be a father, casually reveals the name he plans to give his unborn son: Adolphe. What starts as a joke—or so everyone hopes—hits a nerve instantly. Pierre Salomon, Élisabeth’s husband and a proud Marxist who despises everything tied to fascism, erupts in disbelief. Élisabeth tries to mediate, but Vincent enjoys provoking Pierre just a little too much. Meanwhile, Anna Delambre, Vincent’s pregnant wife, watches the storm with a mix of confusion and amusement. And their childhood friend Claude Barret, always the quiet observer, suddenly finds himself pulled into the argument. Within minutes, the warm family gathering spirals into a sharp, hilarious, and bitter clash. Political ideologies collide, personal grievances resurface, and long-ignored tensions between siblings, spouses, and friends bubble up fast. As the night unravels, the name “Adolphe” becomes more than a name—it becomes the match that sets off a chain of confessions, accusations, and revelations that these five people never expected to face at a simple dinner at home. By the end, this seemingly trivial conversation forces everyone to confront who they are, what they believe, and how fragile even the closest relationships can be.
