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Iconic French actress Brigitte Bardot, who captivated audiences with her alluring style in the 1950s and 1960s and later became a staunch advocate for animal rights, has passed away at the age of 91.
The announcement of her passing was made public by her foundation on their website and through a statement to the French media on Sunday. While the statement did not disclose the specific date or cause of her death, Bardot had been hospitalized in October due to a “serious illness.”
Bardot’s rise to fame began at just 15 years old when she appeared on the cover of Elle magazine in 1950. This marked the start of a prolific career with Bardot gracing the covers of countless fashion magazines in the years to come.
Her breakthrough came when film director Roger Vadim noticed her from those magazine photos. The pair married in 1952, when Bardot was approximately 18 years old.
Shortly thereafter, Bardot launched her film career, starring in Vadim’s 1956 provocative hit, “…And God Created Woman.” Her role, which included a nude scene, solidified her image as a “sex kitten.”
Initially a natural brunette, as seen in her early modeling work, Bardot became synonymous with blonde locks after an Italian director requested she change her hair color for a role. She embraced the look, making it her trademark.

AP Photo
French actress Brigitte Bardot poses with a huge sombrero she brought back from Mexico, as she arrives at Orly Airport in Paris, France, on May 27, 1965.
She and Vadim divorced in 1957. Bardot was married a second time to film producer, actor and artist Jacques Charrier from 1959 to 1962, and a third to German photographer and documentarian Gunter Sachs from 1966 to 1969. Those marriages also ended in divorce.
“Brigitte Bardot was one of the first women to be really modern and treat men like love objects, buying them and discarding them. I like that,” said Andy Warhol, who did a series of screen prints of the screen siren in 1974.
Her fame paralleled that of fellow Warhol subject Marilyn Monroe, though Bardot’s movies weren’t as well-known to American audiences. “La Vérité,” in which she played a woman tried for killing her lover, was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 1961.
Many of her films were fluff. She starred in 1964′s “Agent 38-24-36,” in which she played the girlfriend of Anthony Perkins’ bumbling Russian spy in Cold War London.
Bardot made around 40 movies before deciding in 1971 to pack it in, at age 39.
She wed businessman and movie producer Bernard d’Ormale in 1992 — a union that lasted to her death.

AP Photo/David F. Smith
French film actress Brigitte Bardot and her husband, German playboy Gunter Sachs pose just before boarding a chartered airplane on their honeymoon in Las Vegas on July 14, 1966.
After retirement from film, Bardot became involved in animal rights activism and became a vegetarian. Her lobbying against seal hunting helped lead the European Union to ban the import of seal products.
The BAFTA nominee was found guilty four times for inciting racial hatred, in addition to her 2008 conviction for provoking discrimination and racial hatred against Muslims, an offense for which she was fined over $23,000.
Like many of her contemporaries, including fellow French actress Catherine Deneuve, Bardot enjoyed male flattery, and scorned the #MeToo movement of the late 2010s.

AP Photo/Walter Attenni
French actress Brigitte Bardot poses for photographers on a lawn in the garden of the Excelsior Hotel on the Lido of Venice, Italy, Sept. 2, 1958.
Most actresses complaining of sex harassment are “hypocritical, ridiculous, irrelevant,” Bardot said in a January 2018 interview with the magazine Paris Match.
“I found it lovely to be told that I was beautiful or that I had a nice little ass,” Bardot said. “This kind of compliment is nice.”
“But there are many actresses who tease with the producers in order to get a role,” she said. “Then … they come to tell that they were harassed … In reality, they profit from it rather more than it hurt them.”
IN the summer of 2023, at age 88, Bardot was placed under brief observation for what her husband described as difficulty breathing as she “can no longer bear the heat.”
In fall 2025, after releasing French ABC book “Mon BBcédaire,” around her 91st birthday, Bardot was hospitalized for three weeks after she reportedly underwent “surgery in the context of a serious illness.”
“All my life … I was never what I wanted to be, which was frank, honest, and straightforward,” she told Vanity Fair in a 2012 interview.
“I wasn’t scandalous — I didn’t want to be. I wanted to be myself. Only myself.”