Brigitte Bardot in a scene from the 1960 film The Truth.

PARIS 鈥 Actress Brigitte Bardot shot to international fame dancing the mambo barefoot in And God Created Woman, her tousled hair and fierce energy radiating a sexual magnetism rarely before seen in mainstream cinema.

A global icon was born.

At just 21, she scandalized censors and captivated audiences. Her free-spirited performance in the 1956 film, shot by her husband Roger Vadim, marked a decisive break from the demure heroines of the previous era.

Brigitte Bardot, often referred to in France simply as 鈥淏.B.鈥 and whose later years were marked by animal rights campaigns and far-right political sympathies, has died at the age of 91, her foundation said on Sunday. The cause was not immediately known.

鈥淗er films, her voice, her dazzling fame, her initials, her sorrows, her generous passion for animals, her face that became Marianne 鈥 Brigitte Bardot embodied a life of freedom. A French existence, a universal radiance. She moved us. We mourn a legend of the century,鈥 said French President Emmanuel Macron, referring to the fact that Ms. Bardot鈥檚 face was used as the model for an official bust of Marianne, an allegorical female figure who symbolizes the values of the French Republic, which was installed in town halls across the country from the late 1960s onward.

鈥楽HE FOLLOWS HER INCLINATIONS鈥
Born in Paris on Sept. 28, 1934, Ms. Bardot grew up in an upper-middle-class household. She described herself as a shy, self-conscious child who 鈥渨ore spectacles and had lank hair.鈥

By 15, however, she graced the cover of Elle magazine, launching a modelling career that soon led to film.

Ms. Bardot鈥檚 character in And God Created Woman was the embodiment of liberated femininity. The controversy only fueled her appeal. Ms. Bardot became a symbol of 1950s and 鈥60s France.

Her allure extended far beyond French cinema. At 15, Bob Dylan is said to have written his first song about her, the never-released 鈥淪ong for Brigitte,鈥 while Andy Warhol painted her portrait.

Ms. Bardot鈥檚 ability to subvert traditional gender roles made her not just a sex symbol, but a pop culture icon and a touchstone for shifting social attitudes.

In 1959, Simone de Beauvoir penned an article for Esquire magazine in which she lionized Ms. Bardot鈥檚 conspicuous sense of freedom. 鈥淏.B. does not try to scandalize,鈥 the feminist philosopher wrote. 鈥淪he follows her inclinations. She eats when she is hungry and makes love with the same unceremonious simplicity.

鈥淢oral lapses can be corrected, but how could B.B. be cured of that dazzling virtue 鈥 genuineness? It is her very substance.鈥

Ms. De Beauvoir concluded: 鈥淚 hope she will mature, but not change.鈥

鈥業鈥橵E BEEN LET DOWN TOO OFTEN鈥
Despite her influence, Ms. Bardot found celebrity life isolating. She often spoke of being a prisoner of her own fame, unable to enjoy life鈥檚 simple pleasures.

鈥淣obody can imagine how horrific it was, such an ordeal,鈥 she reflected decades later. 鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 go on living like that.鈥

Her personal life was shaped by four marriages, widely reported affairs, and well-documented struggles with depression.

On her 26th birthday she was found unconscious at a house on the French Riviera after trying to take her own life. Rumors of another attempted suicide surfaced years later when she mysteriously canceled a 49th birthday party then appeared in hospital.

Alongside her acting, Ms. Bardot enjoyed a successful music career. Her collaborations with singer-songwriter Serge Gainsbourg, including the erotic 鈥淛e t鈥檃ime … moi non plus鈥 (鈥淚 Love You … Neither Do I鈥), drew both acclaim and controversy.

In the late 1960s she modeled for a bust of Marianne, the personification of the French Republic.

But she found little satisfaction in the praise she garnered.

鈥淚 have been very happy, very rich, very beautiful, much adulated, very famous and very unhappy,鈥 she told the magazine Paris Match around the time of her 50th birthday. 鈥淚鈥檝e been let down too often. I鈥檝e had really terrible disappointments in my life. That is why I鈥檝e chosen to withdraw, to live alone.鈥

鈥楾HIS IS MY ONLY BATTLE鈥
Ms. Bardot made the last of her 42 films in 1973. Disenchanted with the industry, she declared the world of cinema 鈥渞otten鈥 and left public life.

鈥淚 will have given 20 years of my life to cinema, that鈥檚 enough,鈥 she said in a TV interview at the time.

She settled in the fashionable French resort of Saint-Tropez, where she found solace among animals and the Mediterranean landscape.

There, she began a passionate defense of animal welfare. 鈥淭his is my only battle, the only direction I want to give my life,鈥 Ms. Bardot said in 2013.

Her devotion to animals became legendary. In 1986, she established the Brigitte Bardot Foundation for the Welfare and Protection of Animals, auctioning off personal souvenirs the following year to raise funds for her cause.

Ms. Bardot supported high-profile activists, such as anti-whaling campaigner Paul Watson, and campaigned vigorously against animal cruelty, at times threatening to leave France over animal welfare disputes.

When actor G茅rard Depardieu accepted Russian citizenship after a public spat with French authorities, in 2013, Ms. Bardot threatened to follow suit if France euthanized two sick circus elephants.

For much of the latter part of her life, Ms. Bardot lived alone behind high walls in Saint-Tropez, surrounded by a menagerie of cats, dogs, and horses.

This passion, she often suggested, was an antidote to her disappointing relationships. 鈥淚 gave my beauty and my youth to men,鈥 she once said. 鈥淚 am going to give my wisdom and experience to animals.鈥

鈥淔rom her rescued pigeons in Saint-Tropez to her beloved dogs, PETA will miss Brigitte, an angel for animals who went to bat and to court to protect them all,鈥 said Ingrid Newkirk, founder of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals or PETA.

鈥楩EMINISM ISN鈥橳 MY THING鈥
As her advocacy intensified, so too did the backlash to her political statements.

Ms. Bardot鈥檚 public remarks on immigration, Islam, and homosexuality led to a string of convictions for inciting racial hatred.

Between 1997 and 2008, she was fined six times by French courts for her comments, particularly those targeting France鈥檚 Muslim community.

In one case, a Paris court fined her 鈧15,000 ($17,000) for describing Muslims as 鈥渢his population that is destroying us, destroying our country by imposing its acts.鈥

In 1992, she married Bernard d鈥橭rmale, a former adviser to the far-right National Front, and later publicly endorsed the party鈥檚 successive leaders, Jean-Marie Le Pen and his daughter Marine Le Pen. Ms. Bardot called the latter 鈥渢he Joan of Arc of the 21st 肠别苍迟耻谤测.鈥

Yet, for all her polarizing views, Ms. Bardot鈥檚 influence endured, whether in fashion 鈥 with media noting regular comebacks of her trademark hairstyle 鈥 or through regular documentaries and coffee鈥憈able books celebrating her rare impact on French cinema.

Asked by French channel BFM TV in May 2025 if she considered herself a symbol of the sexual revolution, she said: 鈥淣o, because before me, plenty of wild things had already happened 鈥 they didn鈥檛 wait for me. Feminism isn鈥檛 my thing; I like men.鈥

In the same interview, she was asked how often she reflected on her film career. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think about it,鈥 she said, 鈥渂ut I don鈥檛 reject it, because it鈥檚 thanks to it that I鈥檓 known everywhere in the world as someone who defends animals.鈥 Reuters