Jane Birkin
About Jane Birkin
British actress and singer based in France since the late ’60s.
Born: 14th December 1946 London, England
Died: 16th July 2023 Paris, France
She was a bit of a It-girl during the swinging sixties, appearing in two of the defining movies of the era: Richard Lester’s “The Knack … and how to get it” and Antonioni’s “Blow Up”. She then married movie scores composer [a=John Barry] and had a daughter, photographer [a2271131].
After splitting from [a=John Barry] she relocated to France where she met [a=Serge Gainsbourg] who was himself recovering from his own split from [a=Brigitte Bardot]. One of the most legendary and sexually charged artistic collaborations of the late 20th Century followed, with Jane playing the Beauty to Serge’s Beast on records, most infamously “Je T’Aime … Moi Non-Plus” originally written for and performed by Bardot but banned by Bardot herself, in movies and in French newspapers and TV shows. They had a daughter, actress and singer [a=Charlotte Gainsbourg].
After separating from Serge at the tail end of the seventies she lived with movie director Jacques Doillon with whom she had another daughter, model and actress [a=Lou Doillon]. Her estranged mentor kept on offering her songs to record all through the eighties until his death in 1991. When Serge passed-away, Jane concentrated on her acting career, branching out in theatre and even directing a couple of movies.
She came back to singing in the late nineties, first through various re-interpretations of Serge’s back catalogue and then, in spite of her many declarations she couldn’t even imagine singing someone else’s words, with an album of collaborations with artists as diverse as [a=Bryan Ferry], [a=Caetano Veloso], [a=Feist], [a=Brian Molko], [a=Manu Chao] or [a=Mickey 3D] on 2004 “Rendez-Vous”, followed by further collaborations with [a=Gonzales], [a=Johnny Marr], [a=Rufus Wainwright], [a245226], [a=Beth Gibbons] and [a=Kate Bush] on 2006 “Fictions”.
Daughter of [a4186910] and sister of [a2349556]. Aunt of [a2982298].
Appointed OBE (Order of the British Empire) in 2002.