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Left school at 14

Born in Normandy in 1948 to artistic parents, Baye left school at 14 and first pursued dance before eventually discovering acting.

She had difficulties in school due to dyslexia and dyscalculia, which led her to leave education early. She then moved to Monaco to study dance, a step that would later set her on the path toward her acting career.

”I was brought up with very few rules, so that what rules there were I really respected. I was sensible and well-behaved, actually. Certainly compared to some of my schoolfriends,” Baye once told The Guardian.

Her breakthrough came in the 1970s when she began working with some of France’s most influential directors, including François Truffaut, Jean-Luc Godard, and Maurice Pialat.

A young Nathalie Baye / Marita Coustet/Sygma via Getty Images

She earned critical acclaim for roles in films like The Return of Martin Guerre and La Balance, the latter winning her a César Award for Best Actress. Over the years, she built a reputation for emotionally rich performances and a commanding screen presence.

Beyond her professional life, Baye had a high-profile relationship with French rock icon Johnny Hallyday, and their daughter, Laura Smet, followed in her footsteps to become an actress.

Baye is survived by her daughter and grandson. Close friends and collaborators have also been deeply shaken by the news. Among them was director Thierry Klifa, who had been one of Baye’s closest friends for 25 years. Speaking to Le Parisien, he reflected on their enduring bond and described their friendship as unbreakable.

”She was the queen of laughter”

Overcome with grief, Klifa said he turned off his phone for an entire day after learning of her death. He spoke of a woman who faced hardship with rare dignity.

Their friendship began in 1999, when Baye gave a long interview to Studio magazine, where Klifa was working as a journalist at the time. After the interview, she called him back to say she had enjoyed their conversation and suggested they go to the theater together.

“That was her — simple, spontaneous,” he recalled.

From that moment, a close friendship formed that lasted for decades. Even as illness entered her life, Klifa remained by her side. He said they would meet regularly, going for walks and sharing meals, and emphasized their mutual loyalty.

ANGOULEME, FRANCE – AUGUST 28: Nathalie Baye during the 17th Angouleme French-Speaking Film Festival on August 28, 2024 in Angouleme, France. (Photo by Arnold Jerocki/WireImage)

“She was loyal to her friends, and I stayed loyal to her until the very end,” he said.

He remembered her as someone who met everything with grace and never complained. “She taught me so much and gave me so much. She was incredibly generous — and so radiant, always full of laughter. She was the queen of laughter.”

“I will miss that smile terribly,” Klifa added.

Her legacy lives on through a body of work that shaped French cinema and reached audiences around the world.

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