For our colleagues at Nous Deux, Michèle Bernier returned to some very strange memories from her childhood.
© Bestimage For our colleagues at Nous Deux, Michèle Bernier returned to some very strange memories from her childhood.
IN BRIEF
- Michèle Bernier spoke at length about her childhood
- The opportunity for the actress to reveal some very surprising memories
- Particularly about her famous father
Michèle Bernier is a renowned actress. During her interview on the show Sept à Huit, on Sunday, January 5, 2025, the actress looked back on several aspects of her life, including her childhood, with a famous father, Georges Bernier, nicknamed Professor Choron, co-founder of Charlie Hebdo and Hara-Kiri.
“My father was a first-class anarchist. He was a man without concession and that's how he made his newspapers because he felt free, he had many trials, that that was été difficult. The bans on Hara-Kiri and Charlie Hebdo were every time a hell”.
200% Deposit Bonus up to €3,000 180% First Deposit Bonus up to $20,000Michèle Bernier remembers his childhood
Sometimes hard memories for the actress, who confided in her about her end-of-year celebrations that she spent with her parents. “My parents had brought an extra to the countryside to help my mother because we éwas very numerous. This young man, one would never have disappointed him to say: 'If you are thirsty, help yourself.' He was dead drunk after two hours. He was no longer good for anything and only thought about flirting with my cousins. It was memorable”, says Michèle Bernier à our colleagues from Nous Deux.
The actress still evokes good memories: < em>“We spent Christmas in the countryside with all my cousins who came from the south of France. The table was huge and we were excited at the idea of getting together to play board games ;summer, good meals, walks in nature. For New Year's Day, I will decide at the last moment”.
An education to the opposite ; of the one she gave to her children
And for Michèle Bernier, it was very difficult for her to see that her childhood was not very serene: “&At the time, we did not there was no question of whether it was good for a child or not. But I never took it as a lack of love. It was fun to witness “grandparents' parties,” she remembers.
So, when she became a mother, out of question for the actress to reproduce the same pattern: “I did not at all raise my children like that ;a. Thirty years later, things had already changed. (…) It must be said that at that time, only the bourgeois woman had the means to pay a nanny. We lugged the children everywhere, çit was not shocking.”