Ppda beatrice dalle biography

‘Driving south on the A7 from Lyon to Marseille, I find my thoughts turning to some of the scenes associated with the name of Béatrice Dalle. They include: Dalle as a cannibal, staring vacantly into space, her lips, throat and naked torso smeared in the blood of a lover whose throat she has ripped apart.

‘Dalle as a psychopath who has just torn the unborn foetus from the womb of a heavily pregnant woman. Dalle sleeping in a Paris morgue with friends who sever body parts which they peddle to medical students. And Dalle sitting by the hospital bed of her jealous spouse who has put a bullet in his brain. Of these four scenarios, the first two are from film roles; the others occur in her own accounts of her own extraordinary life.

‘If you had to choose one adjective which least suited Béatrice Dalle, you might do worse than “demure”. The actress, who celebrated her 50th birthday recently, may have become an object of desire to rival Bardot or Monroe, but her behaviour has, on occasions, been more reminiscent of a female Oliver Reed (a remarkable achie

Of all her unfortunate experiences, it's her first marriage, to Jean-François, that seems the saddest and the most mysterious. She says that Betty Blue, for him, was "a nightmare"; that he wanted to be the centre of attention, and wasn't." There's almost a sense, listening to her, that he felt emasculated by her stealing his name. She says that they met at Le Gibus, a Parisian club that, in its heyday in the late Seventies, hosted The Sex Pistols, The Clash and Iggy Pop. "Anything I know about the visual arts," she says, "Jean-François taught me."

They were married on 21 May 1985, and filming of Betty Blue began that September. In Que Dalle, she explains how Jean-François came on to the set. Jean-Jacques Beineix and Dalle's co-star Jean-Hugues Anglade were, she claims, so vile to Jean-François that he showed up one day with two bullets in his hand: "One for each of them."

It's only when I get back to England, and am researching the history of the nightclubs she frequented 30 years ago, that I come across

Le Divan (émission de télévision)

Le Divan est une émission télévisée qui a vu le jour le . Elle se déroule à la manière des consultations de psychanalyste et dure environ vingt-cinq minutes. Henry Chapier, l'animateur et créateur de l'émission, va y recevoir plus de trois cent personnalités parmi lesquelles Francis Ford Coppola, Serge Gainsbourg, Claudia Cardinale, Arletty, Enki Bilal, Mylène Farmer, Spike Lee, Ségolène Royal, Jean-Marie Le Pen ou encore Christian Lacroix) qui répondent à ses questions allongées sur un divan jaune, devenu le symbole de l'émission. Le Divan reste réputé pour l'originalité de ses entretiens ainsi que la personnalité et la voix marquantes de son animateur et créateur.

En , le divan jaune et le fauteuil rouge d'Henry Chapier sont mis aux enchères. Après une séance animée, Omar Harfouch acquiert pour 65 000 euros le fameux fauteuil de marque italienne « Poltrona Frau » que Marc-Olivier Fogiel et Stéphane Courbit lui ont également disputé. À la demande d'Henry Chapier, les bénéfices de la vente sont reversés à l'organisat

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