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1-World
Festival of Foreign
Films Brigitte Bardot Occupation: Actress, model, singer, animal rights activist Born: September 28, 1934, Paris, France The archetypal sex kitten,
Brigitte Bardot was the first foreign-language star
Born on September 28, 1934, in Paris, she was the daughter of a wealthy
industrialist; while studying ballet, she was approached with the offer to begin
modeling, and by 1950 her image had already graced the cover of Elle
magazine. There she was spotted by director Marc Allegret, who had earlier
discovered the young Simone Simon. Soon Allegret's assistant, Roger Vadim,
contacted Bardot for a role in the picture Les Lauriers Sont Coupes.
While Allegret did not cast the young model in his film, Vadim became
immediately smitten by her pouty sensuality, and in 1952 he became her husband.
That same year, Bardot made her film debut in Jean Boyer's comedy
Le Trou Normand; a series of bit roles
followed before she appeared in Warner Bros.' 1955 production of Helen of
Troy. The studio was sufficiently impressed to offer a seven-year contract,
but she refused, to accept her largest role to date opposite Jean Marais and
Isabelle Pia in Futures Vedettes. While still largely an unknown, Bardot soon enjoyed a string of hits, including Cette Sacree Gamine, Mi Figlio Nerone, and En Effeuillant la Marguerite, which positioned her as France's top sex symbol by 1957. As Bardot's popularity continued to soar, producer Raoul J. Levy offered Vadim the opportunity to direct his wife in Et Dieu Crea la Femme, an erotic melodrama co-starring Jean-Louis Trintignant. The film made Bardot an international star, earning over four million dollars in the U.S. alone. Unfortunately, her marriage to Vadim did not last, although their respective careers remained intertwined for years to come. Bardot's popularity with American audiences was unprecedented for a non-English speaking actress, and after Levy cut a reported 225,000-dollar three-picture deal with Columbia for her services, she next starred in the sex romp Une Parisienne, followed by Vadim's Les Bijoutiers du Clair de Lune. After much deliberation, plans were finally announced for Bardot's English-language debut, Paris by Night, to be helmed by Vadim with Frank Sinatra in the lead. The project fell through, however, and she next appeared in 1960's Babette s'en va-t-en Guerre opposite Jacques Charrier, who briefly became her second husband. While filming Henri-Georges Clouzot's La Verite later that year, Bardot attempted suicide on her 26th birthday. After production resumed, the completed film rose to become France's top moneymaker for the year, but it marked the end of her Columbia deal, and in light of her cooling popularity in the States and in Britain no other deals were immediately forthcoming. In 1960, Bardot released a pop music album, Inside Brigitte Bardot; several other LPs, including 1963's Brigitte Bardot Sings and 1968's Special Bardot, were to follow, and she scored a number of hit singles in tandem with the infamous singer/songwriter Serge Gainsbourg. After she fired the original director on the 1961 comedy La Bride Sur le Cou, she had Vadim step in to complete the picture. She next starred with Marcello Mastroianni in Louis Malle's La Vie Privée, delivering a clearly autobiographical turn as a young celebrity unable to cope with the pressures of stardom. The picture was intended as Bardot's swan song, but she was quickly coerced out of retirement to star in Jean-Luc Godard's brilliant Le Mépris. While today recognized as a classic, at the time of its release the movie was the subject of very mixed reviews, with considerable editing required for release outside of France. As a result, it was a commercial disaster, and Bardot's standing as Europe's most popular actress was usurped by Sophia Loren.
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