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Film

Gainsbourg, a life lived in revenge for the yellow star

A new film shows how the French rebel songwriter was driven by the persecution he suffered in Nazi-occupied Paris.

July 28, 2010 14:48
Serge Gainsbourg (Eric Elmosnino) plays for Brigitte Bardot (Laetitia Casta) in the new biopic of the maverick French songwriter.
4 min read

For most Jews, the yellow star that thousands were forced to wear by the Nazis would not be the most obvious choice of subject matter for a pop song. But then the French songwriter Serge Gainsbourg was never really your average Jew.

Most famous, or perhaps that should be infamous, for the steamy 1960s hit, Je t'aime (moi non plus), in which he duetted with his long-time lover and muse, the actress Jane Birkin, Gainsbourg was no stranger to notoriety. The sharp-suited, Gitane-smoking anti-hero, now revered as the creator of hits for singers Juliette Gréco and Françoise Hardy, as well as Birkin and Brigitte Bardot (with whom he famously conducted a lengthy and public affair), was also a bon viveur and Don Juan of epic proportions.

"For me provocation is oxygen," he once said, but rather than stemming from an anarchic sense of fun, Gainsbourg's love of thumbing his nose at the establishment owed much more to his experiences as a Jewish child, growing up in the early 1940s in Nazi-occupied France.

As can be seen in Gainsbourg, the stylish, expressionistic French biopic released this week, the 14-year-old Lucien Ginsburg - as he was then known - was suddenly required to wear the yellow star, despite the fact that his Russian immigrant parents had built an entirely assimilated French life, never attended synagogue and did not live in Paris' Jewish neighbourhood. The humiliation and seeming irrationality of the experience was to have a profound impact on the boy.