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French singer and actress Marie Laforêt dies aged 80

French singer and actress Marie Laforêt, who opened up French pop music and la chanson française to inspiration from American and European folk music, and who was a prolific actress in French cinema, has died at the age of 80 in Switzerland where she had set up home.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

The singer and actress Marie Laforêt, nicknamed "the girl with golden eyes" after one of her best known films, has died aged 80, reports Radio France Internationale. She acted in 35 films and sold more than 35 million albums.

Laforêt died on Saturday in the Swiss town of Genolier, her family announced on Sunday. The cause of death was as yet unknown.

She became famous as a singer releasing her first single Vendanges de l’amour in 1963. 

It was the first of many hits including Ivan, Boris et moi, Il a neigé sur Yesterday (in tribute to The Beatles), Viens sur la montagne, Marie douceur, Marie colère and Que calor la vida.

Singing in French and Spanish, she opened up French pop music and chanson française, drawing inspiration from American and European folk music.

As an actress she starred in films by René Clement, Georges Lautner, Henri Verneuil and Pierre Granier-Deferre, Michel Deville and Jean-Pierre Mocky.

One of the most notable was the La fille aux yeux d’Or  (The Girl with the Golden Eyes), by Jean-Gabriel Albicocco, whom she married after the shoot in 1961.

Her debut film was the 1960 crime thriller Plein Soleil (Purple Noon) starring Alain Delon and directed by René Clement. It was loosely based on The Talented Mr. Ripley by crime writer Patricia Highsmith.

Laforêt did not keep a happy memory of the film or working alongside Delon.  "He's not funny, he's not intelligent. He's all show with nothing inside," she said in an interview in 2004.

Maïténa Doumenach, her real name, was born on October 5th 1939 in Soulac-sur-Mer (Gironde), in the southwest of France, the daughter of an industrialist.

At the age of 38, she revealed she’d been raped by a neighbour when she was three.

"For decades, it was impossible to talk about it," she said.  "Had I not been raped, I would never have exposed myself in that way to the public. It went against my natural shyness. I chose a career that would provide an outlet for my feelings.”

As a young woman she was attracted to the convent, but discovered a passion for theatre at high school in Paris and in 1959 she won an acting competition.

Lafôret also had a career in theatre and was nominated for a Molières theatre award in 2000 for her breathtaking interpretation of Maria Callas.

Asked in 1968 about having three careers in film, theatre and in song she told the Swiss broadcaster RTS she "didn't have three careers, just three ways of expressing herself".

She remained self-effacing. "I don’t have a voice, I have a timbre,” she said, minimising her talent. "I'm ashamed of doing what I do: interpreting pop songs in a superficial way."

She gradually stopped recording, preferring to write and went to live in Geneva where she opened an art gallery.

In 1994, she published a compilation of songs in four volumes, covering her 30-year career.

See more of this report, with video, from RFI.