Catherine Deneuve | The Ice Queen

In Bernadette, Léa Domenach’s first feature film, Catherine Deneuve lends her features to the former first lady of France Bernadette Chirac, perceived by the public and those around her as dry, cold and haughty. A role that the great lady of French cinema embodies wonderfully.




During her remarkable career spanning more than 60 years, Catherine Deneuve, who celebrated her 80th birthday in October, played very few characters who existed. Certainly, the imperial actress has played some crowned heads on the big and small screens, such as Anne of Austria in D’Artagnan (2001), by Peter Hyams, Marie Bonaparte in Princess Marie (2004), by Benoît Jacquot, and Catherine II of Russia in God Loves Caviar (2012), by Yannis Smaragdis. However, biographical films, very little for her, thank you!

“No, pfff! “, exclaims on the phone the one who dons Bernadette Chirac’s Chanel suits in Léa Domenach’s first feature film. “I agreed to play it because it was a comedy, it was not a biopic in the fullest sense. It’s still something very different and that’s what I liked. A lot of what I liked about it, of course, is that it’s a revenge story. If it had just been done seriously to really tell the story of his life, it wouldn’t have interested me. »

In this playful and offbeat satire that is Bernadette, Catherine Deneuve shows great ease in the comic register. To see her delight in each barb she throws at her partners on screen, we regret that she has not played more often in comedies. “Because there aren’t enough,” she says.

It’s very difficult to write a comedy script. In fact, it’s very rare, unfortunately, because I would have really liked it [d’en jouer davantage].

Catherine Deneuve

Bernadette Chirac, née Chodron de Courcel, entered the Élysée in 1995 when her husband, Jacques Chirac (Michel Vuillermoz), succeeded François Mitterrand. The first lady of France barely has time to savor the victory of the new President of the Republic when their daughter Claude (Sara Giraudeau) makes her understand that she will have to be discreet. However, with the complicity of Bernard Niquet (Denis Podalydès), her chief of staff, she will become the darling of the French people.


PHOTO PROVIDED BY CINEMANIA

Michel Vuillermoz and Catherine Deneuve in Bernadette

Take care of your right

Woman of the left who campaigned for the right to abortion, going so far as to sign the “manifesto of the 343 sluts” in 1971, and for the abolition of the death penalty in the 1980s, Catherine Deneuve, who, in 1985 , lent her features to Marianne, symbol of the French Republic, did not know the wife of the leader of the Rally for the Republic (RPR), a right-wing party claiming the political ideas of General de Gaulle.

“I met her two or three times, but I never had lunch or dinner with her,” she explains.

I knew what I always think, which is to say that she is a really intelligent, cultured woman, who has a fairly dry wit, who can be quite cold, but who has a sense of humor. Many people who didn’t know her always spoke of a cold and dry woman, something that unfortunately was said above all else.

Catherine Deneuve, about Bernadette Chirac

Not having wanted to delve into archive research and interviews before filming, Catherine Deneuve reveals that it was by reading Conversation (Plon, 2001), where Bernadette Chirac confides in the journalist Patrick de Carolis, that she learned the most about her character, who had affirmed in 2015 that her union with Jacques Chirac “was not just a marriage of ‘love, but a marriage of ambition’.


PHOTO BRYNN ANDERSON, ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES

Catherine Deneuve at the Cannes Film Festival, in 2021

“No, it was nothing more than a love marriage!” believes the actress. Why do you say that? Oh no, no! She was very much in love with her husband, and frankly, it shouldn’t have been that easy for her. I think she had ambition for him, but not for herself. She also experienced things that I imagine were hard and difficult with her daughter and her husband, so at times, I think her character became much more closed off. »

In fact, at the request of her daughter Claude, her father’s advisor from 1989 to 2007, Bernadette Chirac, considered out of date with her pastel outfits and embarrassing with her outspokenness, had to change her image and take care of her language. “According to her daughter, she was doing things that were too direct, so she made him change, because in politics you always have to be diplomatic. »

Showing no resemblance to Bernadette Chirac, Catherine Deneuve did not seek to imitate the former first lady. At first surly and cantankerous, her Bernadette later turns out to be almost endearing, even touching.

“It was the director’s choice,” says the actress humbly. I didn’t really have an idea about her before playing her. What I’m left with is what was developed in the project, the things she had done that I read in the book, so I didn’t approach her much more than that. »

At the Imperial cinema on November 12, 11 a.m., as part of Cinemania

In theaters November 17


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