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'''Carla Bruni-Sarkozy''' (born '''Carla Gilberta Bruni Tedeschi''', 23 December 1967) is an Italian-born, naturalized French<ref>{{fr icon}} [http://www.lefigaro.fr/flash-actu/2008/07/09/01011-20080709FILWWW00381-carla-bruni-a-obtenu-sa-naturalisation.php Carla Bruni a obtenu sa naturalisation] - [[Le Figaro]] - [[Agence France-Presse|AFP]], 9 July 2008 </ref> songwriter, singer and former [[Model (person)|model]]. Since February 2008, she has been the third wife of [[President of France|French President]] [[Nicolas Sarkozy]]. She held Italian citizenship until mid 2008.
'''Carla Bruni-Sarkozy''' (born '''Carla Gilberta Bruni Tedeschi''', 23 December 1967) is an Italian-born, naturalized French<ref>{{fr icon}} [http://www.lefigaro.fr/flash-actu/2008/07/09/01011-20080709FILWWW00381-carla-bruni-a-obtenu-sa-naturalisation.php Carla Bruni a obtenu sa naturalisation] - [[Le Figaro]] - [[Agence France-Presse|AFP]], 9 July 2008 </ref> songwriter, singer and former [[Model (person)|model]]. Since February 2008, she has been the third wife of [[President of France|French President]] [[Nicolas Sarkozy]], and is the First Lady of France. She held Italian citizenship until mid 2008.


==Biography==
==Biography==

Revision as of 23:08, 19 September 2008

Carla Bruni

Carla Bruni-Sarkozy (born Carla Gilberta Bruni Tedeschi, 23 December 1967) is an Italian-born, naturalized French[1] songwriter, singer and former model. Since February 2008, she has been the third wife of French President Nicolas Sarkozy, and is the First Lady of France. She held Italian citizenship until mid 2008.

Biography

Heiress to the Italian tire manufacturing company CEAT founded in the 1920s by her grandfather Virginio Bruni Tedeschi that was sold in the 1970s to Pirelli (the brand lives on via its former subsidiary in India, founded in 1958),[2] she was born in Turin, Italy. The family moved to France in 1973, reportedly to escape the threat of kidnapping by the Red Brigades, a Marxist-Leninist terrorist group active in Italy in the 1970s. Carla grew up in France from age five and attended boarding school in Switzerland. She returned to Paris to study art and architecture, but left school at 19 to become a model.

Family

Though she is legally a daughter of Italian concert pianist Marisa Borini and industrialist and classical composer Alberto Bruni Tedeschi, Bruni-Sarkozy revealed to Vanity Fair in 2008 that her biological father is an Italian, naturalized Brazilian grocery magnate Maurizio Remmert, who, as a young classical guitarist, had a six-year affair with her mother.[3]

Her sister is actress and movie director Valeria Bruni Tedeschi, who also resides in Paris. She also had a brother, Virginio Bruni Tedeschi (1959 - 4 July 2006) , who died of complications of HIV/AIDS.

Career

Modeling

Bruni signed with City Models at 19. Paul Marciano, president and creative director of Guess? Inc., came across her picture among composite cards of aspiring models and chose her to model with Estelle Lefébure in campaigns for Guess? jeans. Bruni subsequently worked for designers and fashion houses such as Christian Dior, Givenchy, Paco Rabanne, Sonia Rykiel, Christian Lacroix, Karl Lagerfeld, John Galliano, Yves Saint-Laurent, Chanel and Versace.[4] By the 1990s, Bruni was among the 20 highest-paid fashion models, earning $7.5 million a year. While modeling, Bruni dated Eric Clapton, Mick Jagger and Donald Trump.[5] On Friday, 11 April 2008, it was confirmed that a 1993 nude photograph of Bruni had been auctioned for US$91,000 (£46,098) - more than 60 times the expected price.[6]

Music

In 1997, Bruni quit the world of fashion to devote herself to music. She sent her lyrics to Julien Clerc in 1999, based on which he composed seven tracks on his 2000 album Si j'étais elle.

In 2002, her debut album Quelqu'un m'a dit, produced by ex-lover Louis Bertignac, was released in Europe with success in Francophone countries.[7] Three songs from the album appear in Hans Canosa's 2005 American film Conversations with Other Women. The song "Le plus beau du quartier" was used in H&M's Christmas 2006 commercial.

In 2005, she was a guest in Louis Bertignac's return album on the song Les frôleuses which they sang as a duet.

In 2006, Bruni recorded "Those Little Things" an English-language translation of the Serge Gainsbourg song "Ces Petits Riens", for the tribute album Monsieur Gainsbourg Revisited. She participated in the opening ceremony of the 2006 Winter Olympics in a parade paying tribute to the Italian flag.

Her second album, No Promises containing poems by Yeats, Emily Dickinson, Auden, Dorothy Parker, Walter de la Mare, and Christina Rosetti, set to music, was released in January 2007.

Her albums are released by the French independent record label Naïve, which releases artists such as Vinicius Cantuaria and Aline de Lima.

Her music career still did not cease after becoming the First Lady. She released her third album Comme si de rien n'était (as if nothing happened) on 11 July 2008. The songs are self-penned except for one rendition of "You Belong to Me" and another song featuring a poem by Michel Houellebecq set to music.[8] Royalties from the album will be donated to unidentified charitable and humanitarian cause.[9]

Personal life

I'm monogamous from time to time, but I prefer polygamy and polyandry [10]

Relationships

It has been claimed that Carla Bruni was involved with Louis Bertignac, Mick Jagger (Jagger's wife acknowledged his affair with Bruni was a reason for their separation), Eric Clapton, Donald Trump, Léos Carax, Charles Berling, Arno Klarsfeld, Vincent Perez[11] and former French Prime Minister Laurent Fabius.[12][13]

She has said she is easily "bored with monogamy", and "Love lasts a long time, but burning desire - two to three weeks".[13]

The Enthovens

While living with Jean-Paul Enthoven, Bruni fell in love and started an affair with his son, philosophy professor Raphaël Enthoven (track 2, Raphäel, of Carla's album Quelqu'un m'a dit is named after him), who was at the time married to novelist Justine Lévy, daughter of philosopher Bernard-Henri Lévy.[14] Bruni will later deny ever having an affair with Raphaël's father in an interview published in Vanity Fair, "I never slept with him, not even a minute."[3]

The affair and the ending of her marriage were inspiration for Justine Lévy's book Rien de grave (Nothing Serious), published in 2004. In it, Lévy paints a vitriolic portrait of "Paula", the female who steals the protagonist's husband, as "a preying mantis" with "a Terminator smile".[15]

Bruni and Raphaël Enthoven had a son, Aurélien, in 2001.

Marriage with Nicolas Sarkozy

Bruni met recently divorced French president Nicolas Sarkozy in November 2007 at a dinner party.[16] After a brief romance they married on 2 February 2008 at the Élysée Palace in Paris. The marriage is Bruni's first and Sarkozy's third. Bruni obtained French nationality and abandoned her Italian one the next summer.[17]

First lady of France

Following her marriage to Sarkozy, in February 2008, Carla Bruni-Sarkozy continued accompanying him on state visits, including to the United Kingdom in March 2008, which created a sensation in the international press and the public in the UK and France.[18]
There was controversy on the eve of the state visit to the UK, with the publication by Christie's auction house of a nude photograph of Bruni taken during her career as a model.[19] This photograph sold for $91,000.[20] There was also great interest in Bruni's wardrobe, which was Christian Dior, seen as a diplomatic choice, being a French design house designed by John Galliano, a British designer.[21]
Another controversy was the use of a popular photo of the French President and Bruni in the print advertising of Ryanair. The couple was awarded damages by a French court[22] which they donated to Les Restos du Cœur, an organisation which provides meals to the homeless.

Carla Bruni-Sarkozy has met the Dalai Lama in August of 2008 at a Buddhist temple on a hill in Languedoc, France.[23]

Discography

Year Album Charts French sales
UK USA CAN FR FR DL BEL/W BEL/F SWI AU ITA POR SPA SWE NL DAN FIN GER POL WW
2002
Quelqu'un m'a dit
?
1
1
9
4
27
4
5
14
?
1,200,900
2007
No Promises
65
1
1
1
2
1
11
11
6
5
55
47
2
27
78,400
2008
Comme si de rien n'était
58
195
15
1
1
2
6
3
10
21
21
32
31
38
23
15
30
20
~ 150,000

References

  1. ^ Template:Fr icon Carla Bruni a obtenu sa naturalisation - Le Figaro - AFP, 9 July 2008
  2. ^ Template:Fr icon Bruni-Tedeschi, de la saga à la telenovela - Libération, 4 February 2008
  3. ^ a b Paris Match - Vanity Fair, Page 2, September 2008 issue
  4. ^ Carla Bruni, Fashion Insider, accessed 2008-01-07
  5. ^ Brendan Bernhard (2007-02-02). "The Supermodel School of Poetry". New York Sun. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  6. ^ "Nude photo of French first lady sells in New York for $91,000". International Herald Tribune. 2008-04-11. Retrieved 2008-04-11.
  7. ^ biography of Bruni, RFI, accessed 2008-01-07
  8. ^ Carla Bruni's new pot song - The Times, 21 May 2008
  9. ^ Bruni's 'Promises' To Arrive This Summer - Billboard.biz, 21 May 2008
  10. ^ Time Magazine, vol. 170, n. 26/27, 31 December 2007 - 7 January 2008. See also
  11. ^ Template:Fr icon ON NE PARLE QUE DE ÇA | CARLA BRUNI - Gala
  12. ^ Time Magazine, vol. 170, n. 26/27, 31 December 2007 - 7 January 2008. See also: Faces to follow in 2008: Presidential Arm Candy - Carla Bruni
  13. ^ a b "Profile: Carla Bruni". BBC News. 2008-01-15.
  14. ^ Template:Fr icon When Carla Bruni broke hearts - Gala, Eliane Georges , 17 August 2005
  15. ^ John Follain, Nicolas Sarkozy and Carla Bruni: Coup de foudre, Times Online, 23 December 2007
  16. ^ France begins to grow weary with the Sarkozy soap opera - The Guardian, 13 January 2008
  17. ^ Carla Bruni a obtenu sa naturalisation - Le Figaro, 9 July 2008
  18. ^ BBC News In Pictures - Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, BBC News, 27 March 2008
  19. ^ [1], Daily Mail, 27 March 2008
  20. ^ [2],14 April 2008
  21. ^ [3], Daily Telegraph, 27 March 2008
  22. ^ Carla Bruni awarded damages from Ryanair - Telegraph, 7 February 2008
  23. ^ Carla saves the day for Sarkozy by solving Dalai Lama dilemma - The Times, 23 August 2008

External links

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