1940: Young Brigitte Bardot

Born in Paris in 1934 into a wealthy, conservative family, Bardot grew up in the 16th arrondissement.
1946: A life of dance

Bardot’s mother encouraged her to take up dancing, and by the age of 13 she was accepted to the prestigious Paris Conservatory, where she trained with Russian choreographer Boris Knyazev.
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1950: Career as a model

At the age of 15, Bardot began exploring a career as a model. She appeared on the cover of Elle in 1950 and again in late 1952, both in point-of-view acting roles.
1952: Her first film

Bardot made his first feature film appearance in 1952 as Jabot Lemoine in Le Trou Normand (Crazy for Love). The film was a comedy starring French actor Andre Bourville.
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1952: Marriage
gettyBardot was working as a model when she met French film director Roger Vadim. They waited to marry until she was 18 (Vadim was 24). The couple married in a church in Paris on December 20, 1952.
1952: Home life

The newlyweds were captured hugging each other when a photographer visited the couple’s apartment in Paris.
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1953: Blockbuster movie

Promoting her first American film, The Act of Love, at the 1953 Cannes Film Festival, Bardot looked every inch the glamorous movie star she was as she walked through the crowd.
1953: Friendly co-stars

Bardot’s Act of Love co-star Kirk Douglas was spotted chatting with Bardot on the beach in Cannes.
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1954: Acquires various roles
gettyBardot continued to get roles in romantic comedies, but in 1954 he branched out into the French adventure film Caroline and the Rebels and the Italian melodrama The Concert of Intrigue.
1955: Big role

Bardot won the coveted role of the handmaiden Andraste in Helen of Troy. Here, the actress is seen trying to push the Trojan wheel on set.
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1955: “Doctor at Sea”
gettyBardot is seen on the set of The Doctor at Sea, which is currently filming in London, England. This film was one of her first non-French films after The Act of Love.
1956: Her breakthrough role

Although Bardot had appeared in notable films since her film debut, it was her role in her husband’s directorial debut, And Who God Made, that ultimately propelled her international film career to new heights.
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1956: Become a movie star

After her role in And God Created Woman, Bardot could hardly walk down the street without being recognized. This sexually explicit film brought fame and notoriety to her and her husband, director Roger Vadim.
1956: Sex Kitten

By 1956, the French actress began to attract more and more attention (especially on the other side of the Atlantic), and the term “sex kitten” was coined to describe her voluptuous appearance.
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1956: Back on set

Bardot looks relaxed in a striped T-shirt and jeans while filming La mariée est trop belle (The Beautiful Bride).
1957: Split

After five years of marriage, Bardot and Vadim divorced in 1957. However, the couple maintained a professional bond, as Vadim directed Bardot in the 1958 film The Night Heaven Fell.
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1957: Filming of “Parisienne”
gettyBardot visited New York in 1957 to film the romantic comedy The Parisienne.
1958: new love
gettyAfter his divorce from Vadim, Bardot had an affair with French singer Sacha Distel. Here, the couple attends the 19th Venice International Film Festival in 1958. Unfortunately, we broke up the following year.
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1958: “The Woman”

Bardot traveled to Seville, Spain to film La Femme et le Pantin, which was released in the United States as The Woman. Here, the actress is captured performing at a flamenco show in Spain.
1959: Another French film
gettyAlthough Bardot’s films were in high demand in the United States, Bardot appeared more often in French than American films. Here she is on the set of the film Voulez-Vous Danser Avec Moi? It was released in the United States as Come Dance with Me.
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