Guillaume Emmanuel Marie de Quengo de TonquΓ©dec (born 18 October 1966) is a French stage, television and film actor. He first earned fame in his homeland for his role as Renaud Lepic in the TV series Fais pas ci, fais pas Γ§a (2007β2017) on France 2, before winning the CΓ©sar Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance in What's in a Name? in 2013. De TonquΓ©dec was made a Knight in the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres in 2015 by Minister of Culture Fleur Pellerin. A native of Paris, Guillaume de TonquΓ©dec grew up in Louveciennes. He studied economics and English at Paris Nanterre University until he joined the Conservatoire national supΓ©rieur d'art dramatique in Paris in 1986 for a three-year programme. In 1989, he began his stage career with a national tour in John Millington Synge's The Playboy of the Western World. He gained recognition in film in Krzysztof Kieslowski's The Double Life of Veronique (1991), followed by his role as Claude Jade's son Jules Martin in List of Merite (1992). In 1996, he starred in RaΓΊl Ruiz's Three Lives and Only One Death. In 2007, De TonquΓ©dec started starring in the successful TV series Fais pas ci, fais pas Γ§a, which propelled him to stardom in France alongside fellow actors ValΓ©rie Bonneton, Isabelle GΓ©linas and Bruno Salomone. In 2013, he won the CΓ©sar Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role as Claude Gatignol in What's in a Name?. Co-star ValΓ©rie Benguigui won the CΓ©sar Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role as Γlisabeth Garraud-Larchet. De TonquΓ©dec had been nominated two years prior for the MoliΓ¨re Award for Best Supporting Actor for the same role he held in the eponymous play in Paris's ThéÒtre Γdouard VII, upon which the film was based. He was subsequently nominated twice for the MoliΓ¨re Award for Best Actor, in 2017 and 2020. Guillaume de TonquΓ©dec, whose ancestors owned the ChΓ’teau de TonquΓ©dec in Brittany from 1626 to 1801 and again from 1828 until 1878, is married to interior designer ChristΓ¨le Marchal. They reside in L'Γtang-la-Ville, Yvelines. They have three children: Amaury, TimothΓ© and Victoire. Source: Article "Guillaume de TonquΓ©dec" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.