Dominique Wilms
- Actress
- Soundtrack
Dominique Wilms was born Claudine Maria Célina Wilmes to French parents in the Belgian town of Montignies-sur-Sambre in the municipality of Charleroi. Much to her mother's chagrin, she abandoned studies at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris to become a model for celebrated fashion designer Edouard Molyneux. After winning the Miss Saint Germain des Pres Award and, thereby, having achieved a certain level of local fame, she was noticed on the Champs Elysees by the director and impresario Edmond T. Gréville, who, in turn, recommended her to Bernard Borderie as the female lead for his next film, La môme vert de gris (1953).
Curvaceous and with her long, strawberry blonde hair, Dominique very much resembled Veronica Lake, and, like the 'Peek-a-boo Girl', soon found herself cast as femmes fatale in fashionable crime melodramas, often based on the novels of Peter Cheyney. Her frequent co-stars included the craggy expat American actor Eddie Constantine and her actor-husband Jean Gaven with whom she appeared in two exotic adventure films, set in South-East Asia: La rivière des trois jonques (1957) and Les aventuriers du Mékong (1958).
When her popularity in France began to wane, Dominique appeared in Italian and German productions, including (as Queen Astrid) in the sword-and-sandal epic Giulio Cesare, il conquistatore delle Gallie (1962) (starring Cameron Mitchell as an unlikely Julius), in Carré de dames pour un as (1966) (as a secret service agent) and in an episode of the German crime comedy Graf Yoster gibt sich die Ehre (1967).
After quitting show business, Dominique studied at the Ecole du Louvre for four years and then returned to her original passion for painting and restoring art objects.
Jean Gaven, her husband of 57 years (!) died in 2014.
Curvaceous and with her long, strawberry blonde hair, Dominique very much resembled Veronica Lake, and, like the 'Peek-a-boo Girl', soon found herself cast as femmes fatale in fashionable crime melodramas, often based on the novels of Peter Cheyney. Her frequent co-stars included the craggy expat American actor Eddie Constantine and her actor-husband Jean Gaven with whom she appeared in two exotic adventure films, set in South-East Asia: La rivière des trois jonques (1957) and Les aventuriers du Mékong (1958).
When her popularity in France began to wane, Dominique appeared in Italian and German productions, including (as Queen Astrid) in the sword-and-sandal epic Giulio Cesare, il conquistatore delle Gallie (1962) (starring Cameron Mitchell as an unlikely Julius), in Carré de dames pour un as (1966) (as a secret service agent) and in an episode of the German crime comedy Graf Yoster gibt sich die Ehre (1967).
After quitting show business, Dominique studied at the Ecole du Louvre for four years and then returned to her original passion for painting and restoring art objects.
Jean Gaven, her husband of 57 years (!) died in 2014.