First Name
Roger
Last Name
Vadim
Birthday
1928-01-26
Build
Slim
Hair Color
Salt and Pepper
Birthplace
Paris, France
Zodiac Sign
Aquarius
Died
2000-02-11
Place of Death
Paris, France
Ethnicity
White
Claim to Fame
Former husband of Jane Fonda
Gender
Male
Nationality
French
Role ID
Director, Writer, Actor/Actress
Has Detailed Data (New)
1
Profile Bio Text
He was born Roger Vladimir Igorevich Plemyannikov, on January 26, 1928, in Paris, France. Although his father gave him the first name Vladimir, the French law then required a French first name. His father, Igor Nikolaevich Plemyannikov, was a Russian-Ukrainian aristocrat who was born in Kiev, and emigrated with the White Russians after the Communist revolution of 1917. His mother, Marie-Antoinette Ardilouse, was a French actress. Young Roger Vadim spent his childhood in Turkey and Egypt, where his father served as a French diplomat. Roger Vadim was brought up in a multi-lingual home with an intellectually stimulating environment, and he enjoyed a highly cultural atmosphere of his parents circle. However, after the divorce of his parents, Vadim had to live on his own, and soon, he simply abandoned his cumbrous last name. Upon his return to Paris, Vadim caught an acting bug and made his stage debut at the age of 16. From 1944 to 1947, he studied at Institut d'études politiques de Paris at University of Paris but dropped out at the age of 19 to pursue a career in acting and writing. In 1947, he wrote his first novel and presented it to André Gide for a review. However, Gide was not excited about Vadim's first novel and encouraged him to pursue a career in film. Upon André Gide's introduction Roger Vadim became an apprentice of film director Marc Allégret, as an assistant director and co-writer. At the same time he was also a part-time journalist with the Paris Match magazine.
In 1949, 21-year-old Vadim lived in the Paris apartment of Danièle Delorme and Daniel Gélin and was babysitting for their 3-year-old son, who once demanded Vadim to make him a paper airplane. Vadim took a May 2, 1949, issue of the Elle magazine to rip out a page, but doing so, he saw a photo of Brigitte Bardot, then a 14-year-old fashion model. Vadim became fascinated with Bardot's image, and gave her photo to director 'Marc Allegret', who was about to film Vadim's script. Although Bardot did not get a role, Vadim started a relationship with young Brigitte, while her parents were away. Soon, her enraged bourgeois parents tried to cut him off, and nearly sent Brigitte to a school in England, but Vadim and Brigitte prevailed. His friends procured Brigitte her film debut, so Vadim's relationship with her flourished, until her unwanted first pregnancy, which she would abort, causing her much trauma and long-term fear of maternity. At that time, Bardot's father, Louis Bardot, was in rage and pulled out a gun on Vadim, causing everyone more shock and trauma, that led to Bardot's several suicide attempts. Vadim spared no effort to comfort Bardot with his love and their romantic getaway in Saint-Tropez, making the French Riviera their escape resort. In 1952, Vadim made his film acting debut together with Brigitte Bardot, albeit he was uncredited. In December of 1952, Vadim and Brigitte Bardot became married. Their personal life somewhat stabilized and resulted in a few years of fruitful collaboration. Their groundbreaking film, ...And God Created Woman (1956), co-starring Jean-Louis Trintignant, was also Vadim's directorial debut. The film became a massive box-office hit and catapulted both Vadim and Bardot to world fame. The memorable scene of Brigitte Bardot dancing barefoot on a table to the tango, delighted male audiences and became one of the most titillating scenes in French cinema. Bardot's natural sensuality turned her into an international sex symbol.
During the 1960s, Vadim became known as the husband of American movie star Jane Fonda and used the same formula in further sex-symbol presentations of her in Circle of Love (1964), The Game Is Over (1966), Spirits of the Dead (1968), and then in the title role in Barbarella (1968), which Vadim wrote and directed. Subsequent sex-farces such as Pretty Maids All in a Row (1971) starring Angie Dickinson, as well as his divorce from Fonda in 1973, did nothing to propel Vadim's career. His later films did not arouse the same degree of interest. The American remake of And God Created Woman (1988), was a box-office dud, and Rebecca De Mornay was nominated for a 1989 Razzie Award as Worst Actress.
In his later years, Roger Vadim turned to writing memoirs. In his autobiography "From One Star to the Next" Vadim described his relationships with the women he loved. He had four children: Vanessa Vadim, born to Jane Fonda, Nathalie Vadim, born to actress Annette Vadim (née Stroyberg), Christian Vadim (out of wedlock) with Catherine Deneuve, and Vania Vadim, his son with heiress Catherine Schneider. Roger Vadim died of cancer on February 11, 2000, in Paris, France, and was laid to rest in St. Tropez cemetery, Saint Tropez, France.
Couple Profile Source
www.imdb.com/name/nm0671862/bio
Full Name at Birth
Roger Vladimir Plemiannikov
Dating Preference
Blondes
Count - Awards
2
Age
72
Wikipedia Text
Roger Vadim (26 January 1928 – 11 February 2000) was a French screenwriter, director, and producer as well as a journalist, author and sometime actor.
Cause of Death
Cancer
Occupation Text
Director
Adsafe
1
Has Videos
1
Father
Igor Nikolaevich Plemyannikov
Mother
Marie-Antoinette Ardilous
Posted by sans 29 minutes ago
I hope that his voice can be shame like his mother own
Posted by Alison Everington 4 hours ago
Please may I use a few photos of C. S. Lewis for an article I am putting to...
Posted by Octavo Throbtrouser 10 hours ago
Love to see Bonnie Tyler naked or in a bikini!!
Posted by rakesh 11 hours ago
your upper body is very good but your middle part is not so good.I will sug...
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