04 February 2026

Joanne Woodward

American retired actress Joanne Woodward (1930) made her career breakthrough as a woman with dissociative identity disorder in The Three Faces of Eve (1957). Her awards include an Oscar, three Emmys, and three Golden Globes. Until he died in 2008, she was married for fifty years to actor Paul Newman, with whom she often collaborated, either as a co-star or as an actor in films directed or produced by him.

Joanne Woodward
French postcard by Editions P.I., Paris, offered by Les Carbones Korès 'Carboplane', no. 942. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

Joanne Woodward
Spanish postcard by Postal Oscarcolor, no. 412.

A crush on Laurence Olivier


Joanne Gignilliat Trimmier Woodward was born in Thomasville, Georgia, in 1930. Her parents were Elinor Gignilliat Trimmier Woodward and Wade Woodward. Her older brother, Wade Jr., eventually became an architect.

Her father was an administrator in the Thomasville school system. Her mother was an avid movie lover and enjoyed going to the cinema often. Joanne later claimed that she was nearly born in the middle of the Joan Crawford movie Our Modern Maidens (Jack Conway, 1929). Her mother wanted to name her Joan, but being Southern, she changed it to Joanne.

It wasn't surprising that Joanne wanted to go into the acting profession. Her father wasn't keen on the idea, but her mother was thrilled. When she was 9 years old, Joanne travelled with her mother to Atlanta for the premiere of Gone With the Wind (Victor Fleming, 1939).

During the parade, she leapt into a limousine carrying Laurence Olivier and sat in his lap as she had a crush on him after seeing Wuthering Heights (William Wyler, 1939). Years later, when the two were working on the TV movie Come Back, Little Sheba (Silvio Narizzano, 1977), Olivier claimed to remember the incident vividly.

In her teens, Joanne won many Georgia beauty contests. She wanted to become an actress and saw beauty contests as the first step toward her dream. She enrolled in Louisiana State University, majoring in drama. After graduation and doing small plays, Joanne headed to New York and studied acting with Sanford Meisner. The first thing he tackled was Joanne's southern drawl.

Joanne Woodward
Vintage postcard, no. 5364.

She didn't like him at first sight, but couldn't resist him


Joanne Woodward was soon starring in television productions and theatre. One day, she was introduced by her agent to another young actor at her level, the then-unknown Paul Newman. Joanne, while admitting that he was very good-looking, didn't like him at first sight, but she couldn't resist him.

Soon, they were working closely together as understudies for the Broadway production of 'Picnic' and got along very well. Then both their movie careers took off: Woodward with Count Three and Pray (George Sherman, 1955) and Newman with The Silver Chalice (Victor Saville, 1954).

Adding to the tension was Paul's wife, Jackie, who first refused a divorce. Finally, she gave in, and Paul and Joanne married in Las Vegas in 1958.

A few months later, Woodward won her Best Actress Oscar for The Three Faces of Eve (Nunnally Johnson, 1957), in which she plays a woman with multiple personality disorder. With Woodward's credentials as a star attraction established, Fox gave her top billing in No Down Payment (1957), directed by Martin Ritt and produced by Jerry Wald.

Woodward and Newman co-starred in The Long, Hot Summer (Martin Ritt, 1958), Rally 'Round the Flag, Boys! (Leo McCarey, 1958), From the Terrace (Mark Robson, 1960) and Paris Blues (Martin Ritt, 1961). She was reunited with Martin Ritt on another James Faulkner adaptation, The Sound and the Fury (1959), with Yul Brynner. Sidney Lumet cast Woodward alongside Marlon Brando and Anna Magnani in The Fugitive Kind (1960), a box office disappointment.

Joanne Woodward and Paul Newman
Spanish postcard by F.A.G. Collection: Marlene Pilaete.

Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward
Italian postcard by Max. Photo: Sid Avery / G. Neri.

Do you remember love?


In 1959, Joanne Woodward gave birth to their first child, Elinor Teresa Newman, named after her and Paul's mothers. They both continued with their careers, doing films both together and apart. Two more children followed: Melissa Steward Newman in 1961, and Claire Olivia Newman in 1965. Since then, Joanne has been busy in theatre, film and television as well as ballet performances. She was also involved with charities and taking care of her family.

For her title role in The Stripper (Franklin J. Schaffner, 1963), Joanne was coached in technique by burlesque performer Gypsy Rose Lee. She co-starred with her husband in the films Winning (James Goldstone, 1969), WUSA (Stuart Rosenberg, 1970), The Drowning Pool (Stuart Rosenberg, 1975), Harry & Son (Paul Newman, 1984), and Mr. & Mrs. Bridge (James Ivory, 1990).

She received a Best Actress Oscar nomination for her performance in Rachel, Rachel (1968), directed by Newman. She played mother to real-life daughter Nell Potts (Elinor Teresa Newman) in Newman's The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds (Paul Newman, 1972). Woodward supported Burt Reynolds in The End (Burt Reynolds, 1978), and as the 1970s progressed, she did more television drama. Paul Newman directed or produced her films They Might Be Giants (Anthony Harvey, 1971), the TV Movie The Shadow Box (Paul Newman, 1980), The Glass Menagerie (Paul Newman, 1987) and Empire Falls (Fred Schepisi, 2005).

As a producer, she won another Emmy for the documentary Broadway's Dreamers: The Legacy of the Group Theatre (David Heeley, 1989) in 1990. In 1993, Woodward appeared in the film Philadelphia (Jonathan Demme, 1993) with Tom Hanks and, in the same year, she narrated The Age of Innocence (Martin Scorsese, 1993). Woodward served as artistic director for Westport Country Playhouse, near her home in Connecticut.

Paul Newman died in 2008. A year earlier, he was diagnosed with terminal cancer, a few days after Woodward was first diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease. She moved from Westport, Connecticut, to Santa Monica, California, to be near her three daughters and other family members. Joanne Woodward's mother also suffered from Alzheimer's disease, which is why she chose to play a woman with Alzheimer's in the TV movie Do You Remember Love (Jeff Bleckner, 1985).

Joanne Woodward
Vintage postcard, no. 5364.

Sources: Skye Robinson (IMDb), Wikipedia and IMDb.

03 February 2026

Jacques Normand

Jacques Normand (1865-?) was a French theatre and film actor active from 1896 to 1934. During the early 1910s, he made over twenty films at Pathé, including La Vie de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Maurice André Maître, 1913), in which he portrayed Jesus.

Jacques Normand
French postcard by Edition Pathé Frères for Cinéma de la Poste, Neuilly.

Nick Winter et l’affaire du Célébric hôtel
French collector card from the album 'Pathé Frères, 1911'. Georges Vinter in Nick Winter et l’affaire du Célébric hôtel (Gérard Bourgeois, 1911). Georges Vinter played the detective Nick Winter, Jacques Normand as the hotel rat, while the hotel manager was played by Jacques Vandenne. Vinter stands right on this card, Vandenne left, Normand in the middle. Plot: Nick Winter has to deal with a notorious hotel rat who remains elusive, despite the many misdeeds that signal his presence. He's staying at the Celebric Hotel and is preparing, with the help of an accomplice, to carry out a successful robbery of an old lady's room, whose purse is stuffed with banknotes. But the tempting bag is a trap for our thieves. The old lady is none other than the astonishing Nick Winter, who triumphs once again in this scene.

Jacques Normand in Les victimes de l'alcool (1911)
French collector card from the album 'Pathé Frères, 1911'. Jacques Normand as Jean in Les victimes de l'alcool (Gérard Bourgeois, 1911), scripted by Bourgeois and Paul Garbagni. On the card, Bourgeois is indicated as 'Mr. B. Gérard'. On the bed, Jean's daughter (La petite Lily), who has died because of his neglect. On the floor, his wife, who in her despair has committed suicide (Marie Berthe).

Pathé's Jesus


Jacques Normand was born Gustave Mulot in 1865 in the 14th arrondissement of Paris. He was the son of brush merchants, and he first worked in the family business. After his parents' death, he decided to work in the theatre and took his mother's second name, Joséphine Normand, as his stage name.

Normand first acted for the Théâtre de la République and Théâtre Antoine and then was a member of the Odéon theatre company for about twenty years.

He played leads as Camille Desmoulins in 'Lucile Desmoulins' (Théâtre de la République, 1895), and the title roles in 'Bajazet' (Odéon, 1905), 'Michel Strogoff' (Chatelet, 1906), and 'Nick Carter' (Théâtre Moncey, 1910).

Normand started acting in film in 1909, and for years, he worked for Pathé Frères. He played in shorts directed by Camille de Morlhon, Daniel Riche, Gérard Bourgeois and Paul Garbagni, such as Cagliostro, aventurier, chimiste et magicien / Cagliostro (Camille de Morlhon, Gaston Velle, 1910), Victimes de l'alcoolisme / In the Grip of Alcohol (Gérard Bourgeois, 1911), Le Roman d'une pauvre fille / The Story of a Poor Girl (Gérard Bourgeois, 1911), Nick Winter et l'affaire du Célébric Hôtel / Nick Winter and the Célébric Hotel Affair (Gérard Bourgeois, 1911), La Rivale de Richelieu / The Musketeer's Love (Gérard Bourgeois, 1912), and La Fièvre de l'or / Gold Fever (Ferdinand Zecca, René Leprince, 1912).

In 1913, he played Jesus in Pathé's La Vie de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ / La Passion (Maurice André Maître, 1914). From the late 1910s, he played supporting parts such as Fauvette (Bourgeois, 1918) with Zany Miéris. In 1921, Spencer Gordon Bennett wove a frame story around Pathé's 1913 Passion film with Normand as Jesus, entitled Behold the Man!.

Les victimes de l'alcool (Pathé. 1911)
French collector card from the album 'Pathé Frères, 1911'. Jacques Normand as Jean in Les victimes de l'alcool / Victimes de l'alcoolisme / In the Grip of Alcohol (Gérard Bourgeois, 1911), co-written by Bourgeois, indicated on this card as 'Mr. B. Gérard'. The downfall of Jean and his family: they are evicted. Marie Berthe as Jean's wife, Lascombe as little Jacques.

La rivale de Richelieu (Pathé, 1911)
French collector card from the album 'Pathé Frères, 1911'. Léontine Massart in La rivale de Richelieu (Gérard Bourgeois,1911), also with Jacques Normand as the Count de Chalais, Auguste Volny as Richelieu, Philippe Damorès as the Count de Chateauneuf, Jeanne Berangère as the Queen, and Armand Hauterive as Louvigny. Plot: The enemies of Cardinal Richelieu (Auguste Volny), the famous prelate of the seventeenth century, included the beautiful Duchess de Chevreuse (Léontine Massart), who promised Count de Chalais (Jacques Normand), her ardent admirer, that she would marry him if he accomplished the death of the Cardinal. But the Duchess had a bitter enemy as well. He was the Count de Louvigny (Armand Hauterive), and when he learned that de Chalais had agreed to the request of the Duchess, he informed the Cardinal. De Chalais was arrested and condemned to die. The duchess was heartbroken at the failure of her scheme, and when de Louvigny taunts her about her unsuccessfulness, she becomes so enraged that she plunges a dagger into his breast until he expires and then buries the dirk in her own heart. The colouring of this film and the skill with which it is acted make it an absorbing and powerful drama.

La rivale de Richelieu (Pathé, 1911)
French collector card from the album 'Pathé Frères, 1911'. Léontine Massart in La rivale de Richelieu (Gérard Bourgeois,1911), also with Jacques Normand, Auguste Volny and Armand Hauterive.

La rivale de Richelieu (Pathé, 1911)
French collector card from the album 'Pathé Frères, 1911'. Léontine Massart in La rivale de Richelieu (Gérard Bourgeois, 1911), also with Jacques Normand, Auguste Volny and Armand Hauterive.

Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Pathé, 1913)
Spanish edition by ELD of the postcard series Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ. Photo: Films Pathé Frères. This was the fourth part of the French silent film La Vie de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Maurice André Maître, 1914), with Jacques Normand playing Christ. ELD also issued a postcard series on the other three parts of the films: 1. Naissance de Jésus; 2. L'Enfance de Jésus; 3. Vie publique et miracles de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ. A print of this film has been preserved by the Cinémathèque française. Caption: The Entry of Jesus into Jerusalem.

Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Pathé, 1913)
Spanish edition by ELD of the postcard series Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ. Photo: Films Pathé Frères. This was the fourth part of La Vie de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Maurice André Maître, 1914), with Jacques Normand playing Christ. Caption: Jesus chases the Mercenaries from the Temple.

Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Pathé, 1913)
Spanish edition by ELD of the postcard series Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ. Photo: Films Pathé Frères.This was the fourth part of the French silent film La Vie de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Maurice André Maître, 1914), with Jacques Normand playing Christ. Caption: Peter denies the Lord.

Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Pathé, 1913)
Spanish edition by ELD of the postcard series Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ. Photo: Films Pathé Frères. This was the fourth part of the French silent film La Vie de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Maurice André Maître, 1914), with Jacques Normand playing Christ. Caption: Jesus before Pilate: Ecce Homo.

Cyrano de Bergerac


In the 1920s, Jacques Normand was mostly absent from the film sets in the 1920s. He was Cyrano de Bergerac in the fantasy film Les Mystères du Ciel (Louis Forest, 1921) and played Valcour in the episode film La Loupiote (Georges Hatot, 1922) starring Lucien Dalsace.

Jacques Normand returned to the screen in the early 1930s for a handful of sound films. He appeared in Casanova (René Barberis, 1934), a sound remake of the 1927 silent classic about the adventures of the notorious womaniser and Venetian adventurer Chevalier Giacomo Casanova. Casanova was again portrayed by Ivan Mozzhukhin.

His last known presence was a bit part in Feyder's Le Grand Jeu / The Great Game (Jacques Feyder, 1934) starring Marie Bell and Pierre Richard-Willm. When the film was released in May 1934, Normand would have been around 70 years old. At the time, he was living at 17 Rue Lepic in the 18th arrondissement of Paris, where he had lived since his marriage in September 1921 to Marie-Thérèse Dubor, a dramatic artist twenty years his junior. When and where Jacques Normand died is unknown.

In an interview in the journal Mon ciné in 1923, Normand recalled that when shooting Les Victimes de l'alcool, he performed a delirium tremens with so much vigour and imagination that the whole crew was convinced he really had been drunk while acting the scene.

When questioned by the director, Gérard Bourgeois, afterwards, who was annoyed as this was an anti-alcohol film after all, Jacques Normand responded that he had been 'dry' for over a month and only drank Vichy water since.

Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Pathé, 1913)
Spanish edition by ELD of the postcard series Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ. Photo: Films Pathé Frères. This was the fourth part of La Vie de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Maurice André Maître, 1914), with Jacques Normand playing Christ. Caption: The Flagellation.

Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Pathé, 1913)
Spanish edition by ELD of the postcard series Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ. Photo: Films Pathé Frères. This was the fourth part of La Vie de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Maurice André Maître, 1914), with Jacques Normand playing Christ. Caption: The Crown of Thorns.

Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Pathé, 1913)
Spanish edition by ELD of the postcard series Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ. Photo: Films Pathé Frères. This was the fourth part of La Vie de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Maurice André Maître, 1914), with Jacques Normand playing Christ. Caption: Jesus falls under the cross (Miracle of Veronica).

Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Pathé, 1913)
Spanish edition by ELD of the postcard series Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ. Photo: Films Pathé Frères. This was the fourth part of La Vie de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Maurice André Maître, 1914), with Jacques Normand playing Christ. Caption: Calvary.

Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Pathé, 1913)
Spanish edition by ELD of the postcard series Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ. Photo: Films Pathé Frères. This was the fourth part of La Vie de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Maurice André Maître, 1914), with Jacques Normand playing Christ. Caption: The Crucifixion.

Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Pathé, 1913)
Spanish edition by ELD of the postcard series Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ. Photo: Films Pathé Frères. This was the fourth part of La Vie de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Maurice André Maître, 1914), with Jacques Normand as Christ. Caption: Death of Jesus.

Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Pathé, 1913)
Spanish edition by ELD of the postcard series Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ. Photo: Films Pathé Frères. This was the fourth part of La Vie de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Maurice André Maître, 1914), with Jacques Normand as Christ. Caption: In Descent.

Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Pathé, 1913)
Spanish edition by ELD of the postcard series Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ. Photo: Films Pathé Frères. This was the fourth part of La Vie de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Maurice André Maître, 1914), with Jacques Normand as Christ. Caption: The Grave.

Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Pathé, 1913)
Spanish edition by ELD of the postcard series Passion et mort de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ. Photo: Films Pathé Frères. This was the fourth part of the French silent film La Vie de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ (Maurice André Maître, 1914), with Jacques Normand playing Christ.  Caption: Resurrection and Ascension of Jesus.

Sources: Gallica for Mon ciné (17 May 1923), Wikipedia (French) and IMDb

02 February 2026

Mary Carr

American character actress Mary Carr (1874-1973) was famous for her mother roles. She appeared in more than 140 films from 1915 to 1956.

Mary Carr
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 902/1, 1925-1926. Photo: Transocean Film Co., Berlin.

Mary Carr
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 3233/1, 1928-1929. Photo: Atelier Balázs, Berlin.

A poverty-stricken mother who is rejected by almost all of her siblings


Mary Carr was born in 1874 in Germantown, a Philadelphia suburb, as Mary Kennevan. She became a schoolteacher, but soon gave it up for work as an actress in touring companies.

She married actor William Carr and toured extensively with his company. After the turn of the century, he became involved in film production as both an actor and director.

He brought Mary and their six children into the film business with him. Mary made her film debut in the silent drama short The Shadow of Tragedy (1914), directed by and starring Arthur V. Johnson.

Her roles as self-sacrificing, maternal characters in Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch (Hugh Ford, 1919) and Over the Hill to the Poorhouse (Harry F. Millarde, 1920) made her a star.

Over the Hill was a tremendous success due in large part to her touching portrayal of a poverty-stricken mother who is rejected by almost all of her siblings. Only the black sheep of the family will help her in the end.

Mary Carr in Over the Hill to the Poorhouse (1920)
French postcard. Photo: Fox. Mary Carr in Over the Hill to the Poorhouse (Harry F. Millarde, 1920). The film was a huge success in the Netherlands in 1923-1924, where it ran for three weeks at the Amsterdam cinema Theater Tuschinski and four weeks at the Rotterdam-based Grand Theatre (also owned by Abraham Tuschinski). Normally, every week, Dutch cinemas had a new film. For years, Dutch papers would refer to this film with every new film with Carr. The Dutch title was 'Moeder' (Mother), like the French title 'Maman'.

Mary Carr in Over the Hill to the Poorhouse (1920)
French postcard. Photo: Fox. Mary Carr in Over the Hill to the Poorhouse (Harry F. Millarde, 1920). The film was a huge success in the Netherlands in 1923-1924, where it ran for three weeks at the Amsterdam cinema Theater Tuschinski and four weeks at the Rotterdam-based Grand Theatre (also owned by Abraham Tuschinski). Normally, every week, Dutch cinemas had a new film. For years, Dutch papers would refer to this film with every new film with Carr. The Dutch title was 'Moeder' (Mother), like the French title 'Maman'.

The mother of the movies


Mary Carr followed the success of a poverty-stricken mother, who is rejected by almost all of her siblings, with similar roles in scores of films throughout the silent period. Her Hollywood nickname was 'The Mother of the Movies.'

As older actresses such as Mary Maurice and Anna Townsend passed on, Carr, still in her forties, seemed to inherit all the matriarchal roles in silent films. She separated from William Carr in 1926.

Her notable film appearances include Jesse James (Lloyd Ingraham, 1927) and Second Wife (Russell Mack, 1930). She acted with Laurel and Hardy in the short film One Good Turn (James W. Horne, 1931), in which she demonstrated considerable comedic talent as James Finlayson's antagonist.

In Pack Up Your Troubles (George Marshall, a.o., 1932), she played her signature role as a matronly old woman. Then her film appearances became smaller and fewer, and Carr found herself nearly destitute.

Publicity about her status rallied help to her cause, and she found help and occasional work. She spent her later years appearing infrequently, often in films directed by her son, Thomas Carr. She died at the age of 99 in 1973. She was interred in Calvary Cemetery. Almost all of her children were involved in the film business and appeared with her in Over the Hill to the Poorhouse (1920).

Mary Carr in Over the Hill to the Poorhouse (1920)
French postcard by Le Deley. Photo: Fox. Mary Carr in Over the Hill to the Poorhouse (Harry F. Millarde, 1920). The French title was 'Maman'.

Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy in One Good Turn (1931)
French postcard by Editions La Malibran, Paris, no. CA 78. Mary Carr, Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy in One Good Turn (James W. Horne, 1931).

Sources: Jim Beaver (IMDb), Wikipedia (English and German) and IMDb.

01 February 2026

Vanessa Paradis

At only 14, Vanessa Paradis (1972) became a child star with the worldwide hit single 'Joe le taxi' (1987). Since then, the French beauty has made several films and albums, has become the face of Chanel, and was in a long relationship with Johnny Depp.

Vanessa Paradis
French postcard, no. A069.

Vanessa Paradis in Noce blanche (1989)
French poster postcard by Cart'Postal System, Bourgoin, no. CPS092. Image: Les Films du Losange. Vanessa Paradis in Noce Blanche / White Wedding (Jean-Claude Brisseau, 1989).

Vanessa Paradis
Swiss postcard by Editions de la Lune, no. VP 106, 1989. Photo: Patrick Rouchon.

Vanessa Paradis
English postcard by New-Line, no. 203.

Vanessa Paradis and Vincent Rottiers in Mon Ange (2004)
French poster postcard by CartaPub. Affiche: MK2. Vanessa Paradis and Vincent Rottiers in Mon Ange / My Angel (Serge Frydman, 2004). Caption: The world is bigger when you meet your angel.

Sensual, untamed, mysterious and frankly disturbing


Vanessa Chantal Paradis was born in the Paris suburb of Saint-Maur-des-Fossés in 1972, to interior designers André and Corinne Paradis. Her younger sister is actress Alysson Paradis. Vanessa began to develop her singing career at the age of eight when her uncle, record producer Didier Pain, helped her appear on the local television program L'École des fans, a talent show for child singers. She recorded her first single, 'La Magie des surprises-parties', in 1983 and performed it on an Italian festival in 1985.

Although 'La Magie des surprises-parties' was not a hit, it paved the way for the song with which she became internationally famous, 'Joe le taxi' (1987), when she was 14. It was no. 1 in France for 11 weeks and, unusually for a song sung in French, was released in the United Kingdom, where it reached no. 3. It was taken from her first album 'M&J' (it stands for Marilyn & John) which, although it gained a number 13 placing in France, drew little attention in the UK and did not enter the chart. From 1988 to 1991, Paradis dated French singer Florent Pagny. In March 1989, at age 16, she left high school to pursue her career.

She released the album 'Variations sur le même t'aime' in 1990, containing a remake of the Lou Reed song 'Walk on the Wild Side'. The album was written by acclaimed French composer Serge Gainsbourg, whom she met when she received the best singer award at Les Victoires de la Musique in 1990. Paradis made her film debut in Noce Blanche / White Wedding (Jean-Claude Brisseau, 1990) with Bruno Cremer. For her role as a moody 17-year-old girl in love with her 47-year-old philosophy teacher, Paradis won the 1990 César Award for Most Promising Actress. James Travers at French Films: “Although a teenager when she made this, her first film, she portrays her character with an uncanny maturity and natural spontaneity. Sensual, untamed, mysterious and frankly disturbing, Paradis brings new depth and meaning to the traditional femme fatale of French cinema.” Regrettably, the promising young actress decided to give up acting and concentrate on a singing and modelling career.

In 1991, Vanessa Paradis signed a lucrative contract with Chanel to be the spokesperson for Coco, their latest endeavour. In an advertisement shot by Jean-Paul Goude, she was covered in black feathers, portraying a bird swinging in a cage. In 1992, she moved to the United States to work with Lenny Kravitz, whom she also dated at the time. She started working on a new album in English, a language in which she was now fluent. Written and produced by Kravitz, the album, titled 'Vanessa Paradis', topped the French chart and briefly made the UK listings (number 45). One of the singles from it was 'Be My Baby', which made number 5 in France and gave her another Top 10 hit in the UK, peaking at no. 6. After the relationship with Kravitz ended, she dated French-Slovenian actor Stanislas Merhar until their breakup in 1998.

In March 1993, Paradis started her first international tour, the Natural High Tour. She performed in France, England and Canada. In 1994, 'Live' was released in France. Paradis filmed Élisa (Jean Becker, 1995) with Gérard Depardieu as her father. The film was a big success in France. Other films were Un amour de sorcière / Witch Way Love (René Manzor, 1997) with Jeanne Moreau and Jean Reno, and Une chance sur deux / Half a Chance (Patrice Leconte, 1998), with Alain Delon and Jean-Paul Belmondo. The dreamy black-and-white romance La fille sur le Pont / Girl on the Bridge (Patrice Leconte, 1999) gave her worldwide the status of an emerging actress. Jason Clark at AllMovie: “Playing the object of affection of acclaimed French actor Daniel Auteuil, Paradis earned rave reviews and a place in the hearts of smitten men all over the world.”

Vanessa Paradis
French postcard, no C 198.

Serge Gainsbourg, Vanessa Paradis
French postcard, no. A068. With Serge Gainsbourg.

Vanessa Paradis
French postcard, no. C84.

Vanessa Paradis
French postcard, no C. 133.

Vanessa Paradis
French postcard by Ed. F. Nugeron, no. Record 235. Photo: Paul Cox / London Features.

An angel in Amsterdam


Vanessa Paradis played a call girl in Amsterdam who reluctantly finds herself taking care of an orphaned teenage boy after trying to do a favour for a fellow prostitute in trouble in Mon Ange / My Angel (Serge Frydman, 2004). That same year, Paradis promoted Chanel's new handbags called 'Ligne Cambon'. The following year, she modelled for Chanel again for The New Mademoiselle handbag, and in 2008, she modelled for Miu Miu. On the musical side, she was included in the French children's album and concert 'Le Soldat Rose' (2006).

In 2007, Paradis released the new album 'Divinidylle' and started the Divinidylle Tour. Some concerts were filmed, and a DVD/CD of the tour was released. Paradis won two Les Victoires de la Musique awards for this album in 2008. Some of her later projects include the greatest hits CD 'Best of Vanessa Paradis', which includes the commercial jingle 'I love Paris in the Springtime'. In the cinema, she starred in the romantic comedy L'arnacoeur / Heartbreaker (Pascal Chaumeil, 2010) featuring Romain Duris, and in the 3D animated musical adventure film Un monstre à Paris / A Monster in Paris (2010).

In the Canadian film Café de Flore (Jean-Marc Vallée, 2011), she plays a single mother in the 1960s with a child with Down syndrome. Paradis garnered a Genie Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role at the 2012 Genie Awards (the Canadian Oscars). She released an acoustic album, 'Une nuit à Versailles' (2011), recorded at L'Opéra of the Palace of Versailles. She also released 'Anthologie' (2010), a set of DVDs with rare live performances and interviews from 1987–2007. In 2010, she also became the face of Chanel's new lipstick, Rouge Coco, and of their new handbag line Ranger. Her 2011 international tour included performances in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Europe and Turkey.

From 1998 to 2012, Paradis was in a relationship with American actor Johnny Depp. They have a daughter, Lily-Rose Melody Depp (1999), and a son, John Christopher ‘Jack’ Depp III (2002). Vanessa Paradis was seen in the films Dubaï Flamingo (Delphine Kreuter, 2012) with Sergi Lopéz, the comedy Je me suis fait tout petit / Low Profile (Cécilia Rouaud, 2012) and the psychological drama Cornouaille / House in Brittany (Anne Le Ny, 2012), with Samuel Le Bihan. In 2013 followed the American comedy Fading Gigolo (John Turturro, 2013) with Liev Schreiber and Woody Allen, and a year later, Homosapiennes (Audrey Dana, 2014) with Laetitia Casta and Isabelle Adjani.

In 2016, Paradis co-starred in the American Horror comedy Yoga Hosers (Kevin Smith, 2016) with her daughter Lily-Rose, as a history teacher. She started dating director Samuel Benchetrit, who directed her in his fifth film, Chien / Dog (Samuel Benchetrit, 2017). In 2018, they married in the town of Saint-Siméon. Paradis has a country estate nearby, and her late father owned a small restaurant in the quiet country commune. In 2021, she made her theatre debut in the play 'Maman', written and directed by her husband, at the Edouard VII theatre in Paris. For her performance, she was nominated for the Molière Award for Best Actress in a Private Theatre. Among her recent films are the romantic comedy Cette musique ne joue pour personne / Love Songs for Tough Guys (Samuel Benchetrit, 2021), the melodrama Dis-moi juste que tu m'aimes / Out of Control (Anne Le Ny, 2025) starring Omar Sy, and the upcoming T'as pas changé / Class Reunion (Jérôme Commandeur, 2025).

Vanessa Paradis
French postcard, no CP. 104.

Vanessa Paradis
French postcard, no A067.

Vanessa Paradis
French postcard.

Vanessa Paradis
English postcard by New-Line, no. 203.

Vanessa Paradis
French postcard by Éditions Damilla, Paris, no. 95108. Photo: Pierre Terrasson.

Vanessa Paradis
British postcard, no. MM 201.

Bruno Cremer and Vanessa Paradis in Noce Blanche (1989)
Chinese postcard. Bruno Cremer and Vanessa Paradis in Noce Blanche / White Wedding (Jean-Claude Brisseau, 1989).

Sources: Jason Clark (AllMovie - Page now defunct), James Travers (French Films), Wikipedia (French and English) and IMDb.

New record: 318,734 in January 2026

Dear readers,

EFSP started 2026 with a new visitor record. In January, our view count went through the 300,000 views-in-one-month barrier. It's amazing.

The last record was in November 2025, when we counted 288,011 views in a single month.

Thank you all for visiting us. We hope you liked our blog and will keep coming back this year.

Please, make comments under our posts and keep sending us your emails with suggestions and anecdotes. We love to read them.

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Greetings from Amsterdam,

Paul van Yperen,
co-editor of European Film Star Postcards.


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