A performer at the Théâtre Robert-Houdin from 1888, when it was re-opened by Georges Méliès, Jehanne d'Alcy (also known as Fanny Manieux) later became Méliès's mistress and appeared in a number of his films, including the first of his risqué productions Après le bal - le tub (1897). Méliès's first wife Eugenie died in May 1913, and in 1925 he married d'Alcy. Her concession of a toy stall at the Gare Montparnasse, Paris, manned by Georges, provided their only income for several years. In 1932 they moved into an apartment at a home for cinema veterans. After Méliès's death, d'Alcy appeared in the poignant framing sequences of Georges Franju's short dramatisation of his life, Le Grand Méliès (1952), with Méliès's son André playing his father. Jehanne d'Alcy died on 14 October 1956 at Versailles, aged ninety-two.
A Trip to the Moon
(Secretary / Star / Rocket Attendant (uncredited))
Joan of Arc
(Mère de Jeanne)
The Vanishing Lady
(Woman (as Jeanne d'Alcy))
The Haunted Castle
(Young woman)
Le Grand Méliès
(Self)
The Pillar of Fire
(Ayesha)
After the Ball
(Woman)
The Fat and Lean Wrestling Match
Cinderella
(Fairy Godmother)
Le Grand Méliès
(Commentaire)
Bluebeard
(Le Nouvelle Épouse de Barbe-bleue (as Jeanne d'Alcy))
Cleopatra's Tomb
(le fantôme de Cléopâtre)
The Impossible Voyage
(Villager at Seaport (uncredited))
The Astronomer's Dream
(Phoebe)
A Nightmare
(Woman in Toga)
Pygmalion and Galatea
The Temptation of St. Anthony
(Seductive Woman Who Appears on the Cross (uncredited))
Faust and Marguerite
Alcofribas, The Master Magician
Tunneling the English Channel