France Beaudoin and a Red Carpet Moment: Her Son at the AU REVOIR PLUTON Premiere
The first flashbulbs caught Théo Beaudoin-Graton as he stepped onto the carpet — the young actor identified in the program as the son of Vincent Graton and france beaudoin — amid a cast of emerging performers gathered for the Montréal unveiling of AU REVOIR PLUTON.
Who is France Beaudoin’s son who posed on the red carpet?
Théo Beaudoin-Graton appears in AU REVOIR PLUTON in his first credited acting role. Identified in festival materials as the son of Vincent Graton and france beaudoin, Théo’s path to the film includes study in Arts, Lettres et Communication with a theatre profile at Cégep Saint-Laurent, and work as a teacher and choreographer for competition dance routines at the Centre de danse Espace IDance. His creative résumé also lists participation in dance productions and competitions prior to this debut on screen.
What happened at the premiere of AU REVOIR PLUTON?
The film held a premiere in Montréal as part of the Festival international du film pour enfants de Montréal (FIFEM). The cast and creative team walked a lively red carpet before an audience made up of families and festival attendees. The ensemble credited in festival materials includes Sarah-Jeanne Audet, Zakary Belharbi, Raphaëlle Morissette, Catherine-Audrey Volcy, Zélia Bernard, Yves Morin, Romane Lefebvre, Théo Beaudoin-Graton, Miya Capuano, Matthew Rankin, Océane Bohémier-Tootoo, and Aksel LeBlanc, among others.
AU REVOIR PLUTON was presented at the festival ahead of its wider release. The film, written and directed by Sarianne Cormier, was accompanied at the premiere by its creative team and a unveiled poster that positions the story as a family-friendly tale blending human and planetary characters.
How does AU REVOIR PLUTON connect craft, companies and young talent?
AU REVOIR PLUTON is produced by Voyelles Films with producers Gabrielle Tougas-Fréchette and Guillaume Vasseur credited for the project, and distributed by Maison 4: 3. The production credits highlight the collaborative roles that shape the film’s look and sound: Simran Dewan as director of photography, Patrice Charbonneau-Brunelle in production design, Wendy Kim Pires on costumes, Angela Rassenti on props and a team on sound including Laurent Ouellette, Samuel Gagnon-Thibodeau and Joey Simas. Sophie Farkas Bolla handled editing while music is credited to Peter Venne and Yves Morin.
Both production and distribution entities frame the project as a platform for younger Quebec talent: Voyelles Films’ stated mission emphasizes making images and stories of young creators visible, and Maison 4: 3 positions distribution work as a means to accompany films through release. That infrastructure shapes how a film like AU REVOIR PLUTON moves from set to festival carpet to cinemas.
On the human side, the narrative itself — a charming little planet named Pluton aiming to join the solar system’s official ballet — mirrors the performers’ own quests for recognition. Young actors sharing a premiere night with family and mentors underline the film’s family-centered tone.
Back on the carpet, the sight of Théo — the son of Vincent Graton and france beaudoin — posed for photographs underscores a recurring thread at the premiere: a next generation stepping into public roles, supported by established creative and distribution structures.
AU REVOIR PLUTON is scheduled to reach cinemas following its festival premiere, carrying with it the combined investments of producers, technicians and young performers who framed the Montréal premiere as both a celebration and a public test of a family musical’s reach.
The evening’s red carpet closed where it began: with a young performer stepping away from the cameras toward an audience, the poster now on display and the film’s planet-hero ready to begin her search for belonging.