Leslie Caron: on Fred Astaire, the English and Praying Not To Win an Oscar
Beautiful Leslie Caron (83) was the French ingénue who conquered Hollywood in 1951 when she appeared aged 19 as the female lead in cult musical An American In Paris. Having starred in films such Daddy Long Legs, Gigi, The L-Shaped Room, and Father Goose, her career led her to win two Bafta awards and a Golden Globe for Best Leading Actress, an Emmy award in 2006 for her performance in Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, as well as two nominations for Best Actress at the Oscars. One of the very few ballerinas and actresses to have danced alongside Gene Kelly, Fred Astaire, Mikhail Baryshnikov, and Rudolf Nureyev, she has been by far the most successful French actress in Hollywood. Having sold her Burgundy hotel and restaurant, which she restored and managed for 15 years, she moved to London in 2010, to be closer to her children and grandchildren from her previous marriage to theatre legend Sir Peter Hall. The still stunning actress received Chic-Londres in her Chelsea apartment to talk about buying a tie with Fred Astaire, not being a femme fatale and loving the English.
How would you define yourself in a few words? I believe that I’m a rather nice person. I’m also an overachiever- I always think that I haven’t done enough and when I undertake something, I often go too far. I put my career on hold for 15 years in order to rebuild an auberge, just because I wanted to do something else than being a pawn, which is what an actress is, really. It was a great success, but also a bit mad. I’m also naturally very shy- Jean Renoir, who was my mentor, always used to tell me that shyness was a flaw, not a quality- he was all for communication! read more