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Brigitte Bardot, cultural icon & animal rights adv. dead, 91


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Posted

I think that headline of sliding into disgrace is overheated and inaccurate. Today the President of France called her a national treasure who personified the French spirit(or words to that effect). She was Marianne (symbol of the French Revolution) personified, her image on stamps, in town halls around the country etc. 

As she herself said a few years ago the media and the movie business tried to destroy her but she rejected them and survived, unlike her contemporary Marilyn Monroe. 

Her later in life criticism of Muslims was related to their religious practices regarding animals. 
 

In any case she lived her life according to her own lights. She was a liberated woman. 
 

Posted
7 minutes ago, Luv2play said:

I think that headline of sliding into disgrace is overheated and inaccurate. Today the President of France called her a national treasure who personified the French spirit(or words to that effect). She was Marianne (symbol of the French Revolution) personified, her image on stamps, in town halls around the country etc. 

As she herself said a few years ago the media and the movie business tried to destroy her but she rejected them and survived, unlike her contemporary Marilyn Monroe. 

Her later in life criticism of Muslims was related to their religious practices regarding animals. 
 

In any case she lived her life according to her own lights. She was a liberated woman. 
 

What kind of headline would you consider more appropriate?

 

Posted (edited)

I should explain that growing up in Montreal, the second largest French speaking city in the world after Paris, at that time, I was immersed in French culture alongside North American influences. I became bilingual and watched French cinema and listened to French music.
In the 60’s BB was as omnipresent in our local pop culture as MM. This was not the case in America and BB shunned Hollywood. For Americans, her influence on the cultural scene was marginal.

Today it would be different with the Internet and global culture or at least awareness of events and people all over the world saturating our existence. 

Edited by Luv2play
Posted (edited)
4 hours ago, Luv2play said:

A French Cultural Icon Passes From the Scene

Shouldn't her name be part of the headline? 

I just edited, I hope nobody was disappointed for me calling her an "actress" instead of a cultural icon as you suggested. I wish we could type longer headlines while creating a thread as we used to. 

Of course, she wasn't as famous in the English-speaking world as she was in the Francophonie, but she was admired in the whole world. Her career wasn't as long and international as Alain Delon, but her face was a symbol of 60's beauty. 

I'm amazed nobody so far has mock her because of her PETA like defense of animal rights. At least she had one child with whom she had an on and off relationship, and therefore she can't be insulted as "childless" or "brassier burning" woman. I don't need to say how instrumental she was for the sexual revolution in the 60's and the fact that her career developed at the same time the contraception pill made sex out of wedlock socially acceptable. 

Edited by marylander1940
  • marylander1940 changed the title to Brigitte Bardot, cultural icon & animal rights adv. dead, 91
Posted (edited)

When she once complained that tourists had ruined her town of St. Tropez, the mayor responded what did expect as she had brought the lewdness and perversion.

After she discovered  the tiny fishing village and transformed it into a gay destination, she probably was a little taken aback.  Actually it was a destination for all types of sexualities and they cavorted happily together on one of the best beaches on the Riviera. 
 

I have some wonderful memories of vacationing there, including running into Bardot one evening. I even took my parents once and we spent the night there. 

Edited by Luv2play
Posted (edited)
10 hours ago, Luv2play said:

I should explain that growing up in Montreal, the second largest French speaking city in the world after Paris, at that time, I was immersed in French culture alongside North American influences. I became bilingual and watched French cinema and listened to French music.
In the 60’s BB was as omnipresent in our local pop culture as MM. This was not the case in America and BB shunned Hollywood. For Americans, her influence on the cultural scene was marginal.

Today it would be different with the Internet and global culture or at least awareness of events and people all over the world saturating our existence. 

I don’t think that her influence in the US was marginal. I remember having a poster of her in a very scant bikini hanging in my bedroom as a pre-pubescent adolescent. But tastes change ……

Edited by Nue2thegame
Posted

A respected local art theater has posted a tribute to her on their website, praising her work and influence in cinema. However, many people have posted in the tribute's 'comment' section  complaining of her Islamophobia and far-right stance in later life. The art theater is evidently deleting those comments, creating a minor crisis. A local Reddit thread was created by one of those angered by the theater's actions and most replies to it are ho hum, mind your own beeswax.   

Posted

Perhaps some of the time but the photo they show of her walking with two crutches, she has a radiant smile. Not minimizing her evident suffering pain near the end but what’s so unusual about that!

Posted

She referred to her son as a “tumor” and the married a fascist. I don’t understand why anyone would be ten toes down for a mediocre actress and singer who was a style icon for about a decade. She’s a rather minor artist. 

France has given the world many other wonderful artists from Isabell Huppert to Marion Cottllard. 

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