[Luxus Magazine] Françoise Hardy: the 60s style icon is gone

Françoise Hardy died on June 11, 2024 at the age of 80, after a fierce battle with cancer. Following in the footsteps of Jane Birkin a few months earlier, the public has lost another French chanson star of international stature, as well as a style icon who had no equal when it came to combining androgynous good looks with feminine sensuality. Her sophisticated yet effortless allure made her the epitome of the Parisian dream girl.

 

 

With bangs in the wind, a leggy silhouette, a guitar under her arm and an audience particularly enthralled by her heartfelt pop ballads inspired by her own experiences. We’re not talking about Taylor Swift here, but about Françoise Hardy, who at the age of 80 has joined the stars, the epilogue to a 30-year battle with pharyngeal cancer, which will be made public in 2019.

 

A rare singer-songwriter of the yé-yé period, François Hardy was a synthesis of female emancipation at the dawn of the great upheavals of 1968. A wonderful singer of soulful songs, she remains France’s sole representative in Rolling Stones magazine’s 2023 list of the 200 greatest singers of all time.

 

Raised with her sister by a single mother from a working-class background, the solitary, shy young girl did herself some violence, asking for her first guitar at 16 and making her first appearance at Mireille’s Petit conservatoire de la chanson.

 

She was only 18 when her first song was released… and what a song it was! “Tous les garçons et les filles” (1962) sold 2 million copies! Photos taken with her photographer boyfriend Jean-Marie Périer soon made her a household name across the Channel. So much so that Mick Jagger and David Bowie flocked to meet her.

 

But if the leader of the Rolling Stones saw in her his “feminine ideal”, Bob Dylan his platonic love through poetry, and photographer pygmalion Jean-Marie Périer his muse, it was as much for her talent and personality as for her resolutely avant-garde style for the time.

 

A pioneering androgynous look

 

While flare jeans, high boots and mini-skirts were no match for her, Françoise Hardy’s androgynous physique and discretion were her most distinctive traits. This was in stark contrast to the pulpy, exuberant Marilyn Monroe  pin-ups Brigitte Bardot claimed to be.

When she appeared on the scene with her first hit, she wore a shapeless black sweater and… the bangs that were to become her signature before she opted for a boyish bob.

 

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Picture of Victor Gosselin
Victor Gosselin
Victor Gosselin is a journalist specializing in luxury, HR, tech, retail, and editorial consulting. A graduate of EIML Paris, he has been working in the luxury industry for 9 years. Fond of fashion, Asia, history, and long format, this ex-Welcome To The Jungle and Time To Disrupt likes to analyze the news from a sociological and cultural angle.

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