Legendary Actress DIES

A casket at a graveside surrounded by floral arrangements
LEGENDARY ACTRESS DIES

French cinema legend Brigitte Bardot, who courageously stood against immigration policies and defended traditional French values despite relentless persecution from globalist courts, has died at age 91.

Story Summary

  • Bardot faced five convictions for “racial hatred” simply for opposing mass immigration and Muslim ritual practices
  • She transformed from 1960s sex symbol to fearless animal rights activist who challenged politically correct narratives
  • Despite media attacks, she supported nationalist leaders Jean-Marie and Marine Le Pen who fought for French sovereignty
  • Her face once graced French currency as “Marianne” before globalist politicians removed statues due to her conservative views

From Screen Icon to Conservative Voice

Brigitte Bardot died Sunday, December 28, 2025, at her southern France home, according to the Brigitte Bardot Foundation. The 1960s international superstar rose to fame through provocative films like “And God Created Woman” but became equally known for her unwavering stance against France’s cultural transformation.

Her blonde beauty once symbolized French national identity, with her face chosen as “Marianne,” appearing on statues, stamps, and coins throughout the republic.

Persecution for Defending French Culture

Bardot endured systematic legal persecution for defending traditional French values against mass immigration. French courts convicted and fined her five times for “inciting racial hatred” after she criticized Muslim immigration and ritual slaughter practices.

This judicial harassment exemplifies how European establishments weaponize hate speech laws against citizens who question globalist immigration policies. Despite facing death threats and social ostracism, Bardot refused to abandon her principles, demonstrating the courage lacking in today’s political class.

Political Awakening and Nationalist Support

Bardot’s marriage to Bernard d’Ormale, an adviser to National Front leader Jean-Marie Le Pen, solidified her political transformation toward French nationalism. She praised Le Pen as “lovely and intelligent” while supporting his daughter Marine Le Pen’s 2012 presidential campaign.

Her political evolution reflected growing French frustration with unchecked immigration destroying traditional communities. When globalist politicians removed Bardot-inspired Marianne statues in 1997 due to her immigration stance, it revealed their intolerance for dissenting voices defending national sovereignty.

Animal Rights Legacy Beyond Politics

Bardot’s animal protection work transcended political boundaries, earning France’s highest honor, the Legion of Honor, in 1985. She traveled to Arctic regions exposing seal hunts, condemned laboratory animal experiments, and established a foundation preventing animal cruelty.

Her activism extended globally, urging South Korea to ban dog meat sales and questioning U.S. Navy dolphin capture policies. Environmental campaigner Paul Watson, who protested alongside Bardot for five decades, acknowledged that while many disagreed with her politics, “the animals of this world lost a wonderful friend today.”

Challenging Hollywood’s Victim Culture

During 2018’s #MeToo movement, Bardot courageously challenged Hollywood’s victim narrative, calling protesting actors “hypocritical” for playing “teases” with producers to secure roles.

She stated she never experienced sexual harassment and found compliments about her beauty “charming,” rejecting the feminist orthodoxy that portrays all male attention as predatory.

This principled stance against manufactured outrage demonstrates how Bardot consistently opposed cultural Marxist narratives throughout her later years, refusing to bow to progressive pressure campaigns.