Catherine Dorléac’s youth was marked very early by the cinema. Born into a family of artists on October 22, 1943, she began by dubbing children’s voices in Paramount films. Catherine began on the screen as an extra in her teens. She took the stage name Deneuve, the surname of her mother. She was hired at 20 years in Vice and Virtue by the pygmalion of female stars: Roger Vadim. From her union with the director will be born a son, Christian, who will also become an actor.
Deneuve’s career began at the tender age of 12 in André Hunebelle’s 1957 comedy drama Les Collégiennes in which she appeared alongside her younger sister, Sylvie Dorléac. But it was Jacques Demy’s 1964 musical The Umbrellas of Cherbourg which catapulted the then 21-year-old Deneuve to stardom. From the outset, she worked with the greats, appearing in Roman Polanski’s ground-breaking Repulsion in 1965 and in Luis Buñuel’s Belle de Jour in 1967, both seminal works of sixties cinema. Belle de Jour won her a BAFTA award for Best Actress, and her awards shelf must be mighty long as the baubles have continued to pile up ever since.
She won the Academy Award for Best Actress for Régis Wargnier’s Indochine, the 1998 Volpi Cup for Best Actress at the Venice Film Festival for Place Vendôme and she took home Césars for The Last Metro (1980), directed by François Truffaut, and again for Indochine (1992). And we haven’t even got on to her English-language films yet, movies such as The April Fools (1969), Hustle (1975), The Hunger (1983) and The Musketeer (2001), which served to win her adoration from across the Atlantic.
Movies aside, Deneuve has also worked as a model, beloved of Yves Saint Laurent, and in the late 1970s, she became the face of Chanel No. 5. In fact, her association saw perfume sales rocket in the USA and she soon became the darling of the American press. Such was her popularity that in 1983 she was hired by American Home Products to promote their line of Youth Garde cosmetics, for which she famously proclaimed, “Take a closer look – this year I’ll be 40.” Women across the country rushed to buy in the hope of looking as good.
In 2005, she published her diaries À l’ombre de moi-même (In My Own Shadow, published in English as Close Up and Personal), allowing fans a glimpse behind the scenes of this extraordinary actress’s life. She says, by the way, that she doesn’t mind being an institution – but it’s important to remain vigilant and not rest on one’s laurels. That’s certainly not something Catherine Deneuve can be accused of so far…
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