In 1941, having experienced serious problems with the censorship of the German occupier, he took his repertory company on international tours. He was not to return to France until the war was over.
Auditioned for the Conservatoire National Superieur d'Art Dramatique in
his early years and was rejected three times.
The Athénée theater in the center of Paris, of which he was the director from 1934 to 1951, now includes his name as an homage: Athénée Théâtre Louis-Jouvet.
In 1936 he became teacher of acting technique and theatrical history at
the Conservatoire de Paris but he did not like that work and had
probably had to accept it unwillingly. Very often he arrived late to
lessons and compared his watch with a grandfather clock that was in the
classroom. One day he explicated his habit to the students telling
them: "It's always amazing for me to see something going ahead in this
institution that is still since a century".
Father of three children with Else, Anne-Marie in 1914, John Paul in 1917, and actress Lisa Jouvet in 1924.
Dedicated his life to the theatre and took on film roles solely for the
purpose of financing his theatre company.