- Worked as a telegraph operator and messenger to finance his acting studies at the Theatre National Populaire. Came to motion picture prominence as a seductive young criminal in Luis Bunuel's 'Belle de Jour' (1967). Thereafter, was often employed by avant-garde film makers and typecast in intense roles, often as characters with a complex or dark past.
- Was arrested in Rome for possession of LSD and cocaine in 1972. He spent 17 months in prison before being acquitted by an appeals court and released. He later authored a book about this chapter of his life.
- Father of Balthazar Clémenti.
- Two children, Balthazar Clémenti and Valentin Clémenti-Arnoult.
- Clémenti was also involved with the French underground film movement, directing several of his own films which often featured fellow underground filmmakers and actors. Visa de censure no X was an experimental work composed of two films. New Old was a feature-length work starring Viva released in 1978. He went on to direct La Révolution ce n'est qu'un début, continuons le combat, In the Shadow of the Blue Rascal and Sun.
- He secured his first minor screen roles in Yves Allégret's Jack of Spades ("Chien de pique", 1960), performing alongside Eddie Constantine.
- In 1972, Clémenti's career was derailed after he was sentenced to prison for allegedly possessing or using drugs. Due to insufficient evidence, he was released after 17 months; later he wrote a book about his time in prison.
- Throughout his career he continued to be active in the theatre.
- Born in Paris to an unknown father and Rose Clémenti, a Corsican concierge whose surname he took, Clémenti had a difficult childhood and took refuge in literature and the theatre.
- He studied drama and began his acting career in the theatre.
- His short film Soleil (1988) presents some of his recollections from the time he was imprisoned in Rome.
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