- Born
- Birth nameFanny Marguerite Judith Ardant
- Height5′ 8½″ (1.74 m)
- Fanny Ardant was the youngest of five children born to a cavalry officer and his wife. She was raised in Monte Carlo where she was educated at a convent school. A voracious reader, she discovered Proust when she was 15, and felt as though his writings were for her.
When she was 17 her father died, and the shock of his loss never left her. Shortly before his death Ardant began acting on stage. However, following her father's death she followed his advice and went to university in Aix-en-Provence where she read Political Science. Upon graduating, she took a job working for the French embassy in London; she was sacked from this, for poor timekeeping and being dishevelled. The latter was attributed to the social whirl that she enjoyed in London.
Ardant continued working odd jobs in London before deciding, almost on a whim, to go to drama school. She returned to France for her studies, and before long began acting on stage and then on television. At the age of 31, she was contacted by François Truffaut who had spotted her in a television drama and wanted to cast her alongside Gérard Depardieu in what would be his penultimate film, The Woman Next Door (1981). She went on to star in Truffaut's final film, Confidentially Yours (1983).
While working together, Ardant and Truffaut fell in love, and in 1983 she gave birth to their daughter Josephine. Truffaut died a year later from a brain tumour.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Anonymous
- ChildrenLumir LeverdJoséphine Truffaut
- ParentsJean-Marie Ardant
- RelativesFrédéric Ardant(Sibling)Véronique Ardant(Sibling)
- Her voice.
- Partner with François Truffaut (1981-1984). François died in 1984.
- Grew up in Monaco until the age of 17 when she started studying international relations in Aix-en-Provence.
- The Dutch artist Jan Cremer named a painting of a tulip after her: Tulip Fanny Ardant.
- Learned of François Truffaut's death while filming Les enragés (1985). She refused to stop filming.
- French singer Vincent Delerm wrote song "Fanny Ardant Et Moi" ("Fanny Ardant and me").
- [answering a question about what she wants to do before she passes] I would like to be a hairdresser - a shop in a small village in Italy, Sicily. Sometimes I dream about it. I would cut the hair of everyone - from the priest to the Mafioso, the beautiful lady and the young girl in the wedding. It would be the most important place in the village.
- The strength of the French cinema [is that] the director puts the woman in the middle of the story. And if you look at French literature carefully - Balzac, Flaubert, Stendahl - always look for the woman.
- I think it will become more and more normal to see older actors because the population is becoming more and more older. It's like wine, cinema.
- [on undertaking a role] If you prepare too much, after a while you are not surprised any more by the way the man - the husband or the lover - is going to look at you, to smile at you, to answer you. It's better to be available.
- [on François Truffaut] For him, film was a matter of life and death. He used to say, "In films, trains never run late" - I love that. Film was his salvation because in film everything has a meaning. Life is chaotic but in cinema you can stop time. François used to say, "Those who love life, love cinema." That's for sure.
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