• Ballet and Brigitte Bardot
  • Ballet and Brigitte Bardot

Ballet and Brigitte Bardot

What was it about French film stars that made them such perfect models for ballerina-inspired fashion? In the ‘50s and ‘60s the vogue manifested itself in Brigitte Bardot, whose inimitable French style never failed to deliver elegance and carefree chic. Bardot was the first foreign-language-speaking star to attain major international success and her films were pivotal in establishing a global market for foreign cinema.

When Bardot moves through film space, her classical ballet training is evident in her regal carriage and dance style. She studied at the Conservatoire de Paris and the classic dancer’s wardrobe of leotards, Alice bands, ballerina skirts, and ballet flats often appeared throughout her films and daily ensembles. What began as an anti-establishment look early in her career progressed into a glamorous, tailored flair that remains influential today. The pale make-up and bouffant hairstyle was the perfect counterpart to her mixture of passion and drifting insouciance.

Bardot provided the first celebrity endorsement of the luxury shoe brand Repetto when she asked Rose Repetto to make her a dance slipper she could wear on the unpredictable streets of everyday life. The ravishing results can be seen in the photo of her draped over a Simca at the 1956 Cannes Film Festival. That same festival was the backdrop to the iconic image of her creating a spectacle as she swirled her ballerina skirt for photographers. For a woman who reportedly once said, “I absolutely loathe luxury. It is the one thing I cannot stand,” she had some pretty high-end taste in ballet flats, and the delicious ‘BB’ style was named in her honour.

Bardot’s films often featured dance sequences that utilised her training as a ballerina. In Naughty Girl, a very young, impish Bardot performs in numerous highly charged ballet routines. The wanton mambo dance scene in And God Created Woman shows off her grace and rhythm and maddeningly seductive caprice. In A Very Private Affair, Bardot does a jazzy number that perfectly encapsulates the liberated spirit that was later treated with tragic intensity in Jean-Luc Godard’s Contempt (Le Mepris).

Bardot was first and foremost a sex symbol, an over-ripe beauty whose acting abilities were surpassed by her enthralling screen presence, controversial personal life and the lasting legacy she left on style. As a purveyor of ballet-fashion, she remains unrivalled.

21 June 2010

3 Responses to Ballet and Brigitte Bardot

  1. Alice says:

    Pretty good arabesque there Brigitte! Winged foot and all -what a multi-talented lady!

  2. Kaylene says:

    I always adored her. She was and is amazing. Unlike some of the other movie stars who started off as dancers, she actually does have great technique. Fabulously placed arabesque.

  3. lindsay says:

    i love this woman! she was absolutely the sultriest and most seductive actress/sex symbol EVER! anybody that knows anything about bb knows that she loved ballet. she always thought she would grow up to be a dancer. in the documentary “brigitte bardot…take one”, she talks about ballet and the impact it had on her life. she goes to a studio (if im not mistaken, the same one she went to as a kid/teenager) and she talks about different shows and recitals that she put on and there’s quite a few pictures. i also have a book with a ton of the most beautiful pics ever taken of her and there is one before she became a huge star when she was still a brunette and she’s wearing a complete ballerina outfit-the tutu, the pointe shoes everything and shes actually en pointe. (i think that’s what you call it. im not a ballet dancer so i dont know all the proper words) there are actually quite a few pics of bb wearing pointe shoes. in one she’s smoking a cigarette and kind of looking off in the distance (if i remember correctly) and another one where shes wearing some black pointe shoes and then theres the one with the tutu that i just mentioned. bb’s love for ballet came out in everything she did, everything she wore (her famous repetto ballet flats) the way she walked ect it was just a part of her.

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