Marianne James at the heart of a crazy story in a Parisian bar!

It’s on Instagram that Marianne James gives us an appointment today for one of her episodes of “You are great!” A video format through which she tells anecdotes, eccentric scenes in which she attended or in which she was involved. Like this time when a controller from the SCNF told her that she was “ugly” and “ugly”.

This Monday, September 26, it’s a completely different story that “Baby” in “Mask Singer” tells us. We go back in time to 1980, when Marianne James was 18 and walked the boards with her sister Pascale in a small Parisian theater. One of their habits these stage evenings? Drink a mint tea in rue Saint-Denis after the theatre. “A lot of women who hustle, a lot of cops, guys who inquire”, she begins by telling to set the mood of her evening. In this couscous bar where she is used to, there was a strange couple that evening, a little ravaged by life and excess. “She’s going out, she’s going to do what she has to do”, says Marianne James to explain that this woman was a prostitute. But during that time, his companion had drunk all his glass. Back, seeing her glass empty, the woman blurted out: “it’s me who s*it’s you who drink”. Something to make Marianne James laugh even today, as well as her subscribers fond of these crazy stories she tells on Instagram.

Marianne James regularly meets with her subscribers to tell them about her adventures, which happen to her in her everyday life, as during her appearances on TV. After her appearance in “Mask Singer”, she told behind the scenes of the shooting in great detail on European 1 on August 24th. “We are allocated a person who has sworn on their honor by contract not to say anything and from there it is only that person who pilots you. She calls you “baby”, she comes to pick you up at home, you come home with a cap”, she began by telling. Before continuing: “before arriving on the show, on set, you’re already masked, with big glasses, a huge visor. They found an 8XL for me in the United States, something black that you put on, you don’t must not see the legs, the shoes.”

Laura Bertrand

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