It’s time for secrets for Charlotte Gainsbourg! This Thursday, April 20, 2023, her admirers will be able to find her in the program “En Aparté” on Canal +. The opportunity for her to talk about her immense career… But also her loved ones. In particular his illustrious parents Jane Birkin and Serge Gainsbourg. Being a “girl of” hasn’t always been easy for the star! Because of her parentage, the companion of Yvan Attal suffered multiple bullying at school.
But it is above all the self-destructive behavior of her father which marked her enormously as she pointed out for “Télérama” in 2021. “I was struck by the alcohol, by the states in which he put himself. I felt that he was hurting himself. He clung to me to get into taxis, I did not understand where he wanted to go, what he was looking for. It was painful to accept that he burned himself”, revealed Charlotte Gainsbourg before specifying: “Alcohol did not make him violent, rather gentle on the contrary”.
However, Charlotte Gainsbourg cherishes all the memories by her side. The actress remains very nostalgic for their close relationship. With him, the happy mother of three children liked to shine in the studio… To the point of being annoyed when her dad sometimes honored a certain Vanesse Paradis. “When she collaborated with my father, I was jealous, jealous… It was horribleshe confessed years earlier to the magazine First. I imagine she knows.”
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“I was so ashamed to arrive in a limo…”
For the program “En Aparté”, the interpreter of “Lemon Incest” rebounded on key moments of its existence as specified by the site Jeanmarcmorandini.com. Like his César won in 1986 for his role in Claude Miller’s L’Effrontée. As a reminder at the time, the half-sister of Lou Doillon had received the prize for Best Female Hope. Not a little proud, her parents had obviously accompanied her to the ceremony.
Provocative and extravagant, Serge Gainsbourg had pulled out the heavy artillery to surprise his daughter on D-Day, to her chagrin! “My father before going to the Césars, he had rented a Rolls I believe…”, remembered the latter. “Nah not a Rolls […]. What do you call it the American thing… A limo! And I was so ashamed to arrive in a limo […]”. And to underline with nostalgia: “Today I find it so touching and it’s an incredible memory in the car, he told me ‘especially you don’t cry if you don’t have it’ […] Well, I cried when I received it!”.
NB