France mourns Brigitte Bardot, a titan of French cinema who later courted controversypublished at 15:43 GMT
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Brigitte Bardot, a star of French cinema in the 1950s and 1960s, has died aged 91.
Her signature roles – in films such as And God Created Woman – cemented her cultural status as a symbol of the sexual liberation movement that swept across Europe in the latter half of the 20th Century.
She stepped back from the silver screen at 39, with almost 50 films under her belt. “I gave my youth and beauty to men, I give my wisdom and experience to animals,” Bardot famously pledged, and spent the remainder of her life campaigning for animal welfare under her Brigitte Bardot Foundation.
Today, French President Emmanuel Macron praised her “French existence” and “universal brilliance”. He added: “She touched us. We mourn a legend of the century.”
But, as our culture correspondent Noor Nanji points out, Bardot was not without controversy.
In 2008, she was convicted for the fifth time for inciting racial hatred after complaining on her website that Muslims were “destroying our country by imposing their ways”. She courted further controversy in 2018 for her perceived dismissal of the #MeToo movement.
Still, Bardot retains fans. Tearful tributes have been paid to her in Saint-Tropez, while politicians, a film institution, and numerous animal welfare organisations have issued statements remembering her.
As our reporter in the French Riviera, Pierre-Antoine Denis, noted earlier – media outlets across the country have cleared their usual weekend schedules to focus on Bardot’s life and career.
- We’re ending our live coverage now but if you’d like to keep reading about Bardot’s life and death, head to our news story
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