| Virginie | |
|---|---|
| Written by | Fabienne Larouche | 
| Starring | Chantal Fontaine (1996–2008) Stéphanie Crête-Blais (2007–2010)  | 
| Country of origin | Canada | 
| Original language | French | 
| No. of seasons | 15 | 
| No. of episodes | 1,740 | 
| Production | |
| Production location | Montreal | 
| Running time | 30 minutes | 
| Production company | Aetios Productions | 
| Original release | |
| Network | Radio-Canada | 
| Release | September 16, 1996 – December 16, 2010  | 
Virginie is a French-language Canadian television series that aired Monday through Thursday on Radio-Canada (the French-language CBC television network). It debuted in 1996. The show examined the public and private lives of teachers, students, and families at the fictional Sainte-Jeanne-d'Arc high school. It frequently dealt with controversial social topics, such as teen drug use, ethnic prejudice, divorce, and other subjects touching on contemporary Quebec life. "Virginie" was a téléroman-style drama that often used "cliffhangers" in the storylines. It aired 120 episodes per year of 30 minutes each.[1]
The series was produced and largely written by Fabienne Larouche. Virginie ended in December 2010 after 15 years on air; the last episode aired on December 15, 2010. The final episode drew more than 807,000 viewers in Quebec, or about 200,000 more than its average viewership for a typical episode. The program maintained a high level of popularity throughout its television run.[2]
Current main characters
- Virginie Charest (Stéphanie Crête-Blais, 2007–2010) is a physical education teacher at the school.
 - Frédéric Perreault (Maxime Denommée), boyfriend of Virginie Charest, is a member of the Royal 22e Régiment and currently based in Afghanistan. The 2009 season finale cliffhanger suggested that the character died on duty.
 - Stéphane Lessieur (Peter Miller), former boyfriend of Virginie Boivin and father of her two children. He is currently a police officer with the Sûreté du Québec. He dated the sexologist of the school, Veronique. He is now dating Virginie Charest
 - Bernard Paré (Jean L'Italien)
 - Pierre Lacaille (JiCi Lauzon)
 - Hercule Bellehumeur (Martin Larocque) He is an overweight gym teacher. He is dating Agathe, who is also a gym teacher. Hercule is always on a diet...but loves food and eating too much to resist!
 - Péneloppe Belhumeur (Sonia Vachon) She was a teacher at Ste-Jeanne D'arc. She is the sister of Hercule Belhummeur, the gym teacher. She used to date Lacaille, and had a child with him.
 - Hugo Lacasse (played by Patrice Bissonnette before the 2002 season, then by Fabien Dupuis)
 - Michel Rivest (Marcel Leboeuf)
 - Ghislaine Cormier (Louise Deschâtelets)
 - Monique Rivest (Annick Bergeron)
 - René Ouellet (Michel Forget)
 - * Bobby Rajotte (Hubert Proulx)
 - Pierre-Paul Laporte (Benoit Langlais)
 
Other current characters
- “Toutoune” Laporte (Eric Hoziel)
 - Cathie Laurendeau (Joëlle Morin)
 - Juge Pringle (Réjean Lefrançois)
 - Agathe Sirois (Geneviève Néron)
 - Sylvain Lajoie (Cédric Pépin)
 - Véronique Gagnon (Christine Beaulieu)
 
Past characters
- Virginie Boivin (Chantal Fontaine, 1996–2008) was the main character until 2008 when she left the series. She was a physical education teacher at the school, who left to live in Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean with her two young children.
 - Maurice Ladouceur (Jean-François Mercier) Maurice was killed by a drunk driver.
 - Louise Pouliot (Pascale Desrochers) Louise left after giving birth to her child.
 - Patrick Labbé as Gary Lamothe
 - Monique Chabot as Cécile Boivin
 - Claude Blanchard as Pierre Boivin
 - Anne Dorval as Lucie Chabot
 - Jean-François Pichette as Daniel Charron
 - Marie-Joanne Boucher as Claudie Paré
 - Julie Vincent as Dominique Latreille
 - Frédéric Angers as Guillaume Tremblay
 - Michel Daigle as Édouard Lirette
 - Katerine Mousseau as Mireille Langlois
 - Jacques L'Heureux as Julien Constantin
 - Nathalie Gascon as Andrée Constantin*
 - Véronique Bannon as Karine Constantin
 - Patrice Godin as Marc Dubuc
 - Pauline Martin as Suzanne Simoneau
 - Bernard Fortin as Marc Dupras
 - Muriel Dutil as Lise Bombardier
 - Frédéric Pierre as Sylvestre Paul
 - Alexandra Laverdière as Julie Constantin
 - Marie-Josée Normand as Marilyn Potvin
 - Fanny Lauzier as Véronique Bernier
 - Jean Petitclerc as Michel Francoeur
 - Denyse Chartier as Carmen Paré
 - Yvan Ponton as Luc Paré
 - Denis Bernard as Roger Tremblay
 - Laurence Leboeuf as Évelyne Boivin
 - Roxanne Gaudette-Loiseau as Pénélope Chabot-Charron
 - Omar Sharif Jr. as Oliver Briscbois
 - Béatrice Picard as Alice
 - Cleo Tellier as Émilie
 - Dominique Lévesque as Henri-Paul Dutrisac
 - Maxim Roy as Marie-Claude Roy
 - Pierre Curzi as Gilles Bazinet
 - Robert Gravel as Gilles Bazinet
 - Lucie Laurier as Karine Constantin
 - Antoine Bertrand as Patrick Betrand
 - Tony Conte as Pietro Curvo
 - André Ducharme as Alain Gauthier
 - Maxim Gaudette as Éric Pouliot
 - Martin Gendron as Stéphane Pouliot
 - Myriam Houle as Kim Dubé
 - Nicole Leblanc as Yolande Lacaille
 - Pierre Legris as Robert Bourdages
 - Danièle Lorain as Sœur Jacinthe Lacroix
 - Linda Malo as Sophie Lapierre
 - Isabelle Maréchal as Andréanne Rocheleau
 - Lise Martin as Sœur Rose-Marie
 - Dominique Michel as Geneviève Leblanc
 - Louis-David Morasse as Simon Laberge
 - Iannicko N'Doua-Légaré as Claude Armand
 - Patricia Nolin as Marie Lalonde
 - Eric Paulhus as Guy Landry
 - Julien Poulin as Jean-Louis Beaudry
 - Adèle Reinhardt as Normande Legault
 - Cleo Tellier as Élève principale
 - Geneviève Rochette as Maria-Isabella Ortiz
 - Martin Rouette as Videk Striknër
 - Jason Roy Léveillée as Steve Ferron
 - Isabelle Sénécal-Lapointe as Léa-Marie Clément
 - Caroline Tanguay as Annie Legault
 - Lily Thibeault as Josiane Despaties
 - Daniel Thomas as Philippe Gagné
 - Johanne-Marie Tremblay as Ginette Boivin
 - Sonia Vachon as Pénélope Belhumeur
 - Rosie Yale as Lily Péloquin
 
External links
References
- ↑ "Auteure, Fabienne Larouche". Radio-Canada. Archived from the original on April 25, 2012. Retrieved October 6, 2011.
 - ↑ COUDÉ-LORD, Michelle. "Fidèles à Virginie jusqu'à la fin". Le journal de Montréal. Archived from the original on October 4, 2023. Retrieved October 6, 2011.