Arielle_Dombasle

Arielle Dombasle

Arielle Dombasle

French actress


Arielle Dombasle (born April 27, 1953)[Note 1] is an American-born French singer, actress, director and model. Her breakthrough roles were in Éric Rohmer's Pauline at the Beach (1983) and Alain Robbe-Grillet's The Blue Villa (1995). She has worked with a wide variety of filmmakers, including Werner Schroeter on Two (2002), Philippe de Broca on Amazon (2000), Roman Polanski on Tess (1979), Jean-Pierre Mocky on Crédit pour tous (2011) and Raoul Ruiz on Savage Souls (2001). She also starred in the 1984 ABC miniseries Lace and its 1985 sequel Lace II and appeared as a guest in Miami Vice. Dombasle has released twenty-one singles and ten albums and has directed four movies.

Quick Facts Born, Citizenship ...

Early years

She was born Arielle Laure Maxime Sonnery in Hartford, Connecticut, the daughter of Jean-Louis Melchior Sonnery de Fromental, a silk manufacturer, and Françoise Garreau-Dombasle. She descends from French-American immigrants in Mexico under her grandfather's diplomatic tenure. The family's surname was created in 1912, when Dombasle's grandfather René Sonnery (18871925), an industrialist from Lyon, married Anne-Marie Berthon du Fromental. Arielle took the pseudonym Arielle Dombasle in memory of her mother who died at the age of 36. She was raised as a Roman Catholic.[1]

Dombasle and her brother Gilbert were raised in Mexico by their maternal grandparents after their mother's death in 1964. She attended the Lycée Franco-Mexicain. She was also raised at Château de Chaintré, the Sonnery family estate near Mâcon, Saône-et-Loire. Her maternal grandfather, Maurice Garreau-Dombasle, a close friend of and advisor to Charles de Gaulle,[2] was a long time commercial attaché for the French Embassy, who resigned from his post on September 3, 1940, declaring that he would "never work 'under German control',"[3] and on June that year was one of the founders of France Forever,[4] had later served as the French ambassador to Mexico. Her maternal grandmother was Man'ha Garreau-Dombasle (née Germaine Massenet, 18981999), a writer and poet who translated Rabindranath Tagore's works into French and was a longtime friend of the science fiction writer Ray Bradbury, who dedicated his 1972 novel The Halloween Tree to her.

Career

Dombasle at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival

Dombasle embarked on a career as an actress and singer after attending the Conservatoire International de Musique de Paris[5] and further studies in Mexico.[6] Dombasle has appeared in several Hollywood productions, but most of her acting work has been in French, unlike her albums which are mostly in Spanish and English. She directed four films, Les Pyramides Bleues, Chassé-croisé, Opium and Alien Crystal Palace. She once described her own looks as "a Crazy Horse dancing girl".[7]

In 2006, she released both albums Amor Amor and C'est si Bon in the USA. In September 2006, she also performed three nights in a row at the Supper Club in New York City in front of Michael Douglas, John Malkovich, Lauren Bacall, Salman Rushdie, Andrée Putman and Charlie Rose. The latter invited Arielle Dombasle to promote her albums on The Charlie Rose Show.[8]

Arielle Dombasle then released several albums in France; Glamour à Mort!, Diva Latina, Arielle Dombasle by ERA and La Rivière Atlantique with French rocker Nicolas Ker.

Dombasle joined Les Grosses Têtes, a French radio programme, in January 2016.[9]

That same year, Arielle Dombasle released her fragrance, Le Secret d'Arielle, within Mauboussin. The promotional campaign was created by the French artist Leonardo Marcos.

Dombasle is the first contestant who was confirmed for the eighth season of Danse avec les Stars (the French version of Dancing with the Stars).[10]

In 2018, along with Mareva Galanter, Inna Modja and Helena Noguerra, Arielle Dombasle recreated the French band Les Parisiennes.

Two years later, in 2020, Arielle Dombasle announced she would be releasing a second joint album with Nicolas Ker, named Empire. The album was supposed to be released on April 24, 2020, but was postponed to June 16, 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[11]

Personal life

Dombasle is the third wife of writer Bernard-Henri Lévy. They married on June 19, 1993, at Saint-Paul-de-Vence on the Côte d'Azur where they have a villa. She has two stepchildren, Antonin-Balthazar Lévy and Justine Lévy, a novelist. She was previously married to Dr. Paul Albou, described by Vanity Fair as a "playboy society dentist, 32 years her senior."[6]

In 2009, she signed a petition in support of Roman Polanski, calling for his release after Polanski was arrested in Switzerland in relation to his 1977 charge for drugging and raping a 13-year-old girl, after Steve Cooley, the then Los Angeles District Attorney, tried to prosecute him.[12]

Dombasle is vegetarian.[13] In 2016, she campaigned against abattoirs (slaughterhouses) for PETA.[13]

Theater

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Filmography

Actress

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Director

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Discography

Singles

  • "Paris m'a séduit" (1980)
  • "Cantate 78" (1985)
  • "Je te salue mari" (1986)
  • "Nada más" (1988)
  • "Amour symphonique" (1989)
  • "Liberta" (2000)
  • "Odysseus" (2000)
  • "Rhum and Coca-Cola" (2004)
  • "C'est si bon" (2006)
  • "Où tu Veux" (2007)
  • "Extraterrestre" (2009)
  • "Hasta siempre" (2010)
  • "Porque te vas" (2011)
  • "Mambo 5" (2011)
  • "Ave Maria" (2013)
  • "Cold Song" (2013)
  • "My Love for Evermore" (2015)
  • "I'm Not Here Anymore" (2016)
  • "Carthagena" (2016)
  • "Point Blank" (2016)
  • "Ah c'qu'on est bête" (2018)
  • "Il fait trop beau pour travailler" (2018)
  • "Le chant des sirènes (We Bleed for the Ocean)" (2020)
  • "Just Come Back Alive" (2020)
  • "Le Grand Hotél" (2020)
  • "Humble Guy" (2020)
  • "Twin Kingdom Valley" (2020)
  • "The Palace Of Virgin Queen" (2020)
  • "Desdemona" (2020)

Albums

  • 2000: Liberta
  • 2002: Extase
  • 2004: Amor Amor
  • 2006: C'est Si Bon
  • 2009: Glamour à Mort !
  • 2011: Diva Latina
  • 2013: Arielle Dombasle By Era
  • 2015: French Kiss (with The Hillbilly Moon Explosion)
  • 2016: La Rivière Atlantique (with Nicolas Ker)
  • 2018: Les Parisiennes (with Mareva Galanter, Inna Modja & Helena Noguerra)
  • 2020: Empire (with Nicolas Ker)

Notes

  1. Dombasle's year of birth has been a subject of much debate, and various sources have given dates ranging from 1953 to 1958.

References

  1. Labadie, Pauline (June 7, 2013). "Val-de-Grâce contre Arielle Dombasle: "Une tempête dans un verre d'eau"". Le Figaro. Retrieved September 30, 2016. L'épouse de Bernard Henri-Lévy, catholique fervente, déclare sur son site internet: «Dès l'aurore de ma vie j'ai connu la prière. C'était un moment de recueillement que je croyais obligatoire. Enfant, je m'y appliquais, et déjà, j'en sentais les bienfaits sans trop savoir pourquoi.»
  2. Keylor, William R. (December 7, 2020). Charles de Gaulle: A Thorn in the Side of Six American Presidents. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 42. ISBN 978-1-4422-3676-9.
  3. "France: Troubled Exiles". Time. March 10, 1941. ISSN 0040-781X. Retrieved October 3, 2022.
  4. "A Woman at Home in Many Worlds", The New York Sun, May 24, 2006
  5. "crazy horse avec paris cabaret". Pariscabaret.fr. Archived from the original on August 2, 2008. Retrieved February 14, 2012.
  6. "Arielle Dombasle — Charlie Rose". Charlie Rose. September 13, 2006.
  7. Martin, Thomas (January 22, 2016). "Arielle Dombasle rejoint Les Grosses Têtes !". RTL. Retrieved October 4, 2016.
  8. Moreau, Charlotte (July 19, 2017). ""Danse avec les stars" s'offre Arielle Dombasle". Le Parisien (in French).
  9. "" Just Come Back Alive " le premier single extrait d'Empire !". Arielle-Dombasle.com (in French). March 28, 2020.
  10. "Signez la pétition pour Roman Polanski !". La Règle du jeu (in French). November 10, 2009. Archived from the original on August 29, 2021. Retrieved August 29, 2021.
  11. Beaudoin, Anne-Cécile (September 29, 2016). "Arielle Dombasle, nouvelle icône végétarienne de PETA". Paris Match. Retrieved September 30, 2016.

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