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French actress and journalist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nathalie Rheims (born April 25, 1959, in Neuilly-sur-Seine) is a French writer and film producer.
Nathalie Rheims | |
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Born | Nathalie Alix Jeanne Rheims April 25, 1959 Neuilly-sur-Seine, France |
Nationality | French |
Occupation(s) | Actress, journalist, film producer |
Spouse(s) | Frédéric Botton (1982–1987), Léo Scheer (since 1989) |
Parents |
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Relatives | Bettina Rheims (sister) |
Awards | Knight of the Legion of Honour (2012), Officer of the Order of Arts and Letters (2016) |
Nathalie Rheims came from an Alsatian Jewish family on her father's side: she was the granddaughter of General Léon Rheims, and the daughter of Maurice Rheims, an auctioneer and French Academy member.[1] Her mother, Lili Krahmer, half-sister to David de Rothschild, abandoned her when she was 15 years old. She had a brother, Louis, who died at 33 years old, and for whom she wrote her first novel, L'Un pour l’autre, in 1999.[2] She also had a sister, the photographer Bettina Rheims.[N 1][3]
Her first husband was the composer Frédéric Botton.[4] In 1989, she married Léo Scheer, and later became the partner of film director and producer Claude Berri.
On her mother's side, she was related to the Rothschild family through both her great-grandfather (the "von Worms" branch) and her great-grandmother (the "Naples" branch) of the banker Mayer Amschel Rothschild (1744–1812), founder of the dynasty. Additionally, her maternal grandmother, Alix Schey de Koromla, married Baron Guy de Rothschild in her second marriage.
She was also the goddaughter of actor Yul Brynner.
Nathalie Rheims began her artistic career as a theater actress. In 1976, at the age of 17, she entered the conservatory on Rue Blanche. She performed in La Mante polaire by Serge Rezvani, directed by Jorge Lavelli, with Maria Casarès in the lead role in 1977 at the Théâtre de la Ville.[5] Until 1983, she alternated between theater and television roles. From 1981 to 1985, she also worked as a journalist for the magazine Elle. In 1982, she released her first 45 RPM record, Asphalte. As a singer, she adopted the pseudonym "Alix," the name of her maternal grandmother. She released four more singles, all written by her then-husband, Frédéric Botton.[4][6] In total, he wrote seven songs for her.[N 1] The last one, Big Bang Song !, was the theme song for the amusement park Big Bang Schtroumpf.[7] During this period, the trio of Nathalie Rheims, Frédéric Botton, and Jean-Daniel Mercier wrote six of the seven songs for the album Number One of the Paradis Latin cabaret.[8][N 2][9][10] In 1985, Nathalie Rheims transitioned to producing, initially for TV6, then France 2, producing Haute curiosité, an arts program presented by Claude Sérillon and Maurice Rheims.
In 1999, she published her first novel, L’un pour l’autre (Galilée publishing), awarded the Gai Savoir Prize. In 2000, she published Lettre d’une amoureuse morte with Flammarion. This was followed by Les Fleurs du silence and L’Ange de la dernière heure in 2001 and 2002. In 2002, Rheims co-produced the film Une femme de ménage. In 2003, she released Lumière invisible à mes yeux, published by Léo Scheer. Le Rêve de Balthus, Le Cercle de Megiddo, and L'Ombre des autres were released in September 2004, 2005, and 2006, making her a best-selling author.
As the partner and collaborator of producer-director Claude Berri, she co-founded the film production company Hirsch Production and worked as an associate producer on films such as L'un reste, l'autre part, Les Enfants, Le Démon de midi, La Maison du bonheur, Ensemble, c'est tout, La Graine et le Mulet, and Bienvenue chez les Ch'tis.
At Claude Berri's request, she wrote the song L'un part, l'autre reste, performed by Charlotte Gainsbourg. The soundtrack of the film, composed and arranged by André Manoukian and Frédéric Botton,[11] was later covered by Sylvie Vartan and included in several of her albums.[12]
In 2007, Rheims published her ninth book, Journal intime, roman. Her eighth novel, L'Ombre des autres, was planned to be adapted for the screen with Mylène Farmer in the lead role, but the project was canceled following Claude Berri's death.
In 2008, she published her tenth novel, Le Chemin des sortilèges.
In 2015, she released her autobiographical novel, Place Colette, subtitled Détournement de majeur, which tells the story of her romance at age 14 with an actor 30 years her senior.[3]
Subsequent works include Le père Lachaise, jardin des ombres (2014), La mémoire des squares (2016), Ma vie sans moi (2017), Des reins et des cœurs (2019), Roman (2020), Danger en rive (2021), and Au long des jours (2023).[13]
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