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Leslie Caron

My pity for Polanski

November 5, 2009 11:23
Leslie Caron pictured in 1966. Jews are a “remarkable people,” she says

ByGerald Jacobs, Gerald Jacobs

3 min read

In September 1965, Leslie Caron flew from Hollywood — where she was living in extravagant style with her then lover Warren Beatty — to her home-town of Paris to play a French Resistance fighter in René Clément’s film, Is Paris Burning?

Her “grand scene” took place at Drancy, site of the Second World War transit camp from where French Jews were deported. Among the extras were real survivors whose tattooed arms were bared for the camera. As Caron relates in her just-published autobiography: “I play it only once but it takes me a week to recover from the emotional shock of the scene.”

At the time of the actual Drancy expulsions, Caron was an 11-year-old living in the occupied French capital, unaware of the hideous events nearby. She accepts that many Parisians went along with the Nazis’ actions. “Antisemitism came naturally to a lot of people in France, especially within ‘better’ society’,” she says. “I attribute this to envy. Many intelligent Jews were successful bankers. Some were even ennobled. It seemed that Jews were clever in business and, over the years, the conviction grew that ‘they are going faster than us’.

“There was ambient antisemitism in my family. The deportations were never discussed at home. The round-up at Vel d’hiv [a cycling stadium where 13,000 Parisian Jews were assembled in July 1942 to be delivered to the death camps] must have shocked the normal French citizen. Afterwards, we never saw anyone wearing the yellow star. My mother and father must have talked of it but I never heard about it until after the war.