Why Céline, the ”12 noon shots” champion, shocked Jean-Luc Reichmann and viewers

For more than two months, Céline has been making the rain and the good weather of 12 strokes of noon on TF1. The young woman, who has accumulated more than 266,000 euros in winnings and gifts, is the 18th greatest champion of Jean-Luc Reichmann’s game, and the 3rd historical woman, behind Véronique (6th) and Lucia (14th). But this Friday, May 19, the reigning champion shocked Jean-Luc Reichmann and the viewers, by failing to win a mysterious star yet fully discovered, and this, for three days already.

As we know, since January, the rule of the game of the mysterious star has evolved in Les 12 coups de midi: now, the masters of noon must perform a masterstroke to have the right to propose a celebrity name, and so potentially swipe the window. For three days, Céline has been doing master strokes, giving her the possibility of leaving with a mysterious third star. Issue ? This SNCF planner is unable to identify Léa Drucker.

Indeed, Michel Drucker’s niece has been perfectly identified by viewers, and Jean-Luc Reichmann included, but Céline seems not to know the 51-year-old actress. The one who surprised fans of the game by discovering Timothée Chalamet a month ago even though the actor was difficult to identify, fails to cross-check all the clues that lead to Léa Drucker. After having proposed Gwyneth Paltrow this Thursday, May 18, Céline proposed, in spite of herself, the actress Virginie Efira this Friday.

See also: Jean-Luc Reichmann: the shock announcement published on Instagram!

Yet obvious clues

The clues should however easily guide Céline towards Léa Drucker: the brown sofa inevitably refers to the red sofa on which Michel Drucker, her uncle, has been hosting Vivement Dimanche for more than twenty-five years; the butterfly recalls the first major role that popularized the actress in 2002, in Papillons de nuit; the radio microphone recalls the beginnings of Léa Drucker on Radio Nova, as a columnist for Edouard Baer; the Capitol refers to the life the actress spent in Washington a few years ago; the oboe recalls the role played by Léa Drucker in the film Close last year; the ice in front of the Capitole is a reference to the passion for figure skating of the fifties; finally, a cow is also present, and can possibly refer to the Norman origins of Léa Drucker.

CG

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