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Bardot and racial
On 10 June 2004, Bardot was again convicted by a French court for " inciting racial hatred " and fined € 5, 000, the fourth such conviction and fine from a French court.
In 2008, Bardot was convicted of inciting racial / religious hatred in relation to a letter she wrote, a copy of which she sent to Nicolas Sarkozy when he was Interior Minister of France.
The prosecutor stated that she was tired of charging Bardot with offences related to racial hatred.

Bardot and I
Gilmore told Paris Match: " I felt a beautiful warmth with Bardot but found it difficult to discuss things in any depth whatsoever.
In her own defence, Bardot wrote in a letter to a French gay magazine: " Apart from my husband — who maybe will cross over one day as well — I am entirely surrounded by homos.
" In Doctor at Sea I was cast again as the Plain Jane character ... my rival in love was played by ... Brigitte Bardot.
Other familiar titles are: Anzio by Edward Dmytryk, in 1968, his last Hollywood film appearance ; The North Star ( 1943 ), directed by Lewis Milestone with a script by playwright Lillian Hellman, with Erich von Stroheim ; Edge of Darkness ( 1943 ), also by Milestone, his first film role, where he played his first film German soldier role, opposite Judith Anderson ; Wilson ( 1944 ), where he played the German ambassador to Washington, D. C. during World War I, Count von Bernstorff ; The Cross of Lorraine ( 1943 ), with Gene Kelly ; The Hitler Gang, playing the Nazi official Alfred Rosenberg and Romanoff and Juliet ( 1961 ), written, directed and starring Peter Ustinov, and an Italian-American adaptation of Homer's Iliad, Helen of Troy ( 1956 ), directed by Robert Wise, with Rossanna Podesta, Jacques Sernas, and in two featured roles, Tonio Selwart playing opposite a then almost unknown Brigitte Bardot, in 1956.
Further singles " I Should've Never Let You Go " and " These Days " continued the group's successful assault on the Australian charts and in August, Bardot embarked on its first national tour.
" There was media speculation, as with the Bardot version, that they had recorded live sex, to which Gainsbourg told Birkin, " Thank goodness it wasn't, otherwise I hope it would have been a long-playing record.
Klarwein's own words illuminate the work: " I projected it as a sort of painted musical comedy movie with a Sanskrit swinging cast of thousands, starring Marilyn Monroe, Anita Ekberg, Ray Charles, Pablo Picasso, Brigitte Bardot, Roland Kirk, Cannonball Adderley, Ahmed Abdul Malik, Wonderwoman, Delacroix's Orphan Girl at the Cemetery, Litri and his bullshit fighters, Lawrence of Arabia, Socrates, Dalí, Rama, Vishnu, Ganesh, the Zork and a Milky Way of playmates.
Growing up, I admired the kind of beautiful glamorous woman — from Brigitte Bardot to Grace Kelly — who doesn't seem to be around much anymore.

Bardot and never
They made plans to shoot a film featuring The Beatles and Bardot, similar to A Hard Day's Night, but the plans were never fulfilled.

Bardot and .
Brigitte Anne-Marie Bardot (; ; born 28 September 1934 ) is a former French fashion model, actress, singer and animal rights activist.
Bardot was an aspiring ballet dancer in early life.
Bardot caught the attention of French intellectuals.
She was the subject of Simone de Beauvoir's 1959 essay, The Lolita Syndrome, which described Bardot as a " locomotive of women's history " and built upon existentialist themes to declare her the first and most liberated woman of post-war France.
Bardot retired from the entertainment industry in 1973.
During her career in show business, Bardot starred in 47 films, performed in numerous musical shows, and recorded 80 songs.
After her retirement, Bardot established herself as an animal rights activist.
Her father had an engineering degree and worked with his own father ( Charles Bardot ) in the family business.
Bardot grew up in a middle-class observant Roman Catholic family.
In 1947, Bardot was accepted to the Conservatoire de Paris, and for three years she attended the ballet classes of Russian choreographer Boris Knyazev.
He showed an issue of the magazine to director and screenwriter Marc Allégret who offered Bardot the opportunity to audition for " Les lauriers sont coupés " thereafter.
Although Bardot got the role, the film was cancelled, but it made her consider becoming an actress.
Although the European film industry was then in its ascendancy, Bardot was one of the few European actresses to have the mass media's attention in the United States, an interest which she did not reciprocate by rarely, if ever, going to Hollywood.
The New Wave of French and Italian art directors and their stars were riding high internationally, and he felt Bardot was being undersold.
British photographer Cornel Lucas made iconic images of Bardot in the 1950s and 1960s that have become representative of her public persona.
Bardot was awarded a David di Donatello Award for Best Foreign actress for the role.
Brigitte BardotIn May 1958, Bardot withdrew to the seclusion of Southern France where she had bought the house La Madrague in Saint-Tropez.
Bardot pleaded with Gainsbourg not to release this duet and he complied with her wishes ; the following year, he re-recorded a version with British-born model and actress Jane Birkin, which became a massive hit all over Europe.
The version with Bardot was issued in 1986 and became a popular download hit in 2006 when Universal Records made its back catalogue available to purchase online, with this version of the song ranking as the third most popular download.
Brigitte Bardot and Sami Frey in Saint-Tropez, 1963. On 21 December 1952, aged 18, Bardot was married to director Roger Vadim.
Bardot had an affair with her And God Created Woman co-star Jean-Louis Trintignant ( married at the time to actress Stéphane Audran ) before her divorce from Vadim.
The 9 February 1958 edition of the Los Angeles Times reported on the front page that Bardot was recovering in Italy from a reported nervous breakdown.

denied and racial
He was incessantly tortured by the fear of being regarded as a ‘ bourgeois intellectual ’… It always seemed as if he were offering blind devotion ( to Nazism ) to make up for his lack of all those characteristics of the racial elite which nature had denied him.
Crawfurd, who opposed Darwinian evolution, " denied any unity to mankind, insisting on immutable, hereditary, and timeless differences in racial character, principal amongst which was the ' very great ' difference in ' intellectual capacity.
Crawfurd, who opposed Darwinian evolution, " denied any unity to mankind, insisting on immutable, hereditary, and timeless differences in racial character, principal amongst which was the ' very great ' difference in ' intellectual capacity.
Interestingly, because of this discrimination, Albert Einstein, a champion of racial tolerance, hosted Anderson on many occasions, the first being in 1937 when she was denied a hotel before performing at Princeton University.
Such suits were typically denied on the basis that Mexican Americans were not subject to racial discrimination, despite all evidence to the contrary, because they were legally white.
He has confirmed religious motivation, but denied racial motivation for his crimes.
Justice Black further denied that the case had anything to do with racial prejudice:
All Australians who upheld the White Australia policy were racist in the sense that they upheld a policy which discriminated against coloured migrants ... Calwell never denied the discriminatory reality of the laws: ' It is true that a measure of discrimination on racial grounds is exercised in the administration of our immigration policy.
After being denied admission to the University of Missouri School of Law because he was African American, and refusing the university's offer to pay for him to attend another neighboring state's law school with no racial restriction, he filed suit.
The law school's registrar, Sy Woodson Canada, had denied Gaines ' admission on racial grounds although he was otherwise qualified for admission to the law school.
While this is only one example out of thousands of enslaved persons, it does mean that not all slavery reparations can be determined by racial self-identification alone ; reparations would have to include a determination of the free or slave status of one's African-American ancestors, as well as when and by whom they were enslaved and denied rights such as property ownership.
" Myatt, who was the architect of the NSM, denied that NSM the supported racial hatred but admitted that they intended to accomplish their aim of " an entirely new society, based upon personal honour " through revolutionary activity.
He denied being a racial chauvinist, however, insisting in an address to the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association in Nadi on 29 August 2005 that while ethnic Fijians were unwilling to relinquish power, they were willing to share it.
King claimed it was deliberate part of Respect's campaign, but Galloway's campaigners denied racial abuse accusing the Government of a " war on Muslims ".
The 1990 re-election campaign of Jesse Helms attacked his opponent's alleged support of " racial quotas ," most notably through an ad in which a white person's hands are seen crumpling a letter indicating that he was denied a job because of the color of his skin.
Stapledon's book has been interpreted by some as condoning such interplanetary genocide as a justified act if necessary for racial survival, though a number of Stapledon's partisans denied that such was his intention, arguing instead that Stapledon was merely showing that although mankind had advanced in a number of ways in the future, at bottom it still possessed the same capacity for savagery as it has always had.
University administration under Grayson Kirk denied that this reflected racial bias and stressed that greater park services would benefit the Harlem community.
If Strzygowski's erratic methodology and racial prejudices have largely discredited his own scholarship, his breadth of geographical interest helped to establish Islamic art and ( ironically, given his own anti-Semitism, something which, incidentally, Ernst Gombrich denied in his conversations with Didier Eribon ), Jewish art as legitimate fields of study.
He was not a member of the Nazi Party and – although proud of his German nationality – denied the Nazi claims of racial superiority: " I am a fighter, not a politician.
" Time Out was similarly positive, writing: " This affecting romantic comedy probes the gradations of racial prejudice still prevalent in the South despite JFK's best efforts ... unaccountably denied a theatrical release in Britain, this is a most impressive and enjoyable work.
The Nazis were especially interested in Beethoven's background: " After making sure that Beethoven had no suspicious racial or national tinge of the non-Germanic in his background ( clear evidence of his Flemish ancestry was denied in a series of articles ), the masters of the Nazi propaganda and cultural machinery promoted his works as the essence of Germanic and Aryan strength ".
* Patterson v. McLean Credit Union,, which held that an employee could not sue for damages caused by racial harassment on the job, because even if the employer's conduct were discriminatory, the employer had not denied the employee the " same right.
It was claimed that during a match a month previously, in which Sydney FC won 2-0 and broke the Roar's 36-game unbeaten streak, Bosschaart may have provoked the Albanian by using racial taunts during the game, however this was heavily denied by Bosschaart.
Born in rural Carrabelle, Florida, O ' Neil was initially denied the opportunity to attend high school due to racial segregation ; at the time, Florida had only four high schools specifically for African Americans.

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