Sunday, December 21, 2025

From Cinecittà to the Victorine Studios: Three Icons, One Riviera Myth

 

In Nice, a new exhibition brings together Brigitte Bardot, Mylène Demongeot, and Michèle Mercier—three stars whose lives and careers became inseparable from the French Riviera’s golden age.

The French Riviera has always been more than a backdrop. It is a myth-making machine, a place where cinema, glamour, and freedom collided to create enduring legends. This summer in Nice, that mythology takes center stage once again with “The Little Darlings of the French Riviera,” a new exhibition devoted to Brigitte Bardot, Mylène Demongeot, and Michèle Mercier—three actresses whose destinies are forever intertwined with the Côte d’Azur.

Unveiled this past Saturday at the Lympia Departmental Cultural Center, the exhibition was opened by writer and curator Henry-Jean Servat, who frames the project as both a celebration and a reckoning. Running until April 12, 2026, the exhibition invites visitors to revisit a world of sun-soaked cinema, audacious femininity, and creative freedom—while acknowledging the distance between that era and today.

After previous tributes in Saint-Tropez and Villefranche-sur-Mer, Brigitte Bardot once again finds herself at the heart of a Riviera homage. But this time, she is not alone. Placed alongside Demongeot and Mercier, Bardot became part of a trio that collectively shaped the region’s cinematic identity—from international co-productions and Italian studios like Cinecittà to the legendary Victorine Studios in Nice.

Each woman represents a distinct facet of Riviera stardom. Bardot, the global symbol of liberated sensuality, transformed Saint-Tropez into an international icon. Mylène Demongeot, with her wit and cosmopolitan charm, bridged popular cinema and European sophistication. Michèle Mercier, immortalized by Angélique, embodied romantic adventure and historical fantasy, exporting a distinctly French glamour worldwide.

Described as an exhibition with “the allure of forbidden fruit and the scent of paradise lost,” The Little Darlings of the French Riviera does not indulge in simple nostalgia. Instead, it reflects on how these women navigated fame, desire, and public scrutiny at a time when the Riviera functioned as a laboratory for modern celebrity. Their images—sunlit, carefree, and endlessly reproduced—helped define an era, but also masked the personal costs of stardom.

Firmly rooted in the present, the exhibition invites a contemporary audience to reconsider what the Riviera represented then—and what it represents now. In revisiting these three careers side by side, it becomes clear that the French Riviera was not merely a setting, but an active force: shaping roles, amplifying mythologies, and projecting French cinema onto the world stage.

At Lympia, the past feels tantalizingly close. Not frozen in time, but alive—glimmering between memory and reality, just like the Riviera itself.

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