Julie de Bona makes rare and tender confidences about her 6-year-old son and her role as a mother

Julie de Bona makes rare and tender confidences about her 6-year-old son and her role as a mother
Julie de Bona makes rare and tender confidences about her 6-year-old son and her role as a mother

Interviewed on the occasion of the upcoming broadcast ofEricaher new series, Julie de Bona made rare and tender confidences about her son, now 6 years old, and about her role as a mother.

Fans of Julie de Bona are undoubtedly counting the days at the end of 2024. Indeed, on January 6, TF1 will begin broadcasting its new series Ericaheadlined by the 44-year-old actress. In this adaptation of several novels by Camilla Lackberg, the queen of Swedish thrillers, Julie de Bona plays the leading role, that of Erica Faure, a novelist who will improvise as an investigator alongside a police captain, Patrick Saab, played by Grégory Fitoussi. Questioned by Télé Magazine on the occasion of the upcoming broadcast of this new fiction, the latter indulged in some confidences, in particular about her son, aged 6 years old.

Julie de Bona amazed by the filming conditions of The Count of Monte Cristo, the film with more than 9 million admissions

Firstly, Julie de Bona looks back on her experience in Le Comte de Monte Cristoone of the biggest cinema successes of the year 2024 with more than 9 million admissions. “I was very happy to experience this adventure in idyllic conditions that I am not used to on television” she confides, evoking in particular the “big dinner scene that was shot in three days.“And to add:”I was very well received by the whole team. Then we all went to . Going up the steps was magical“.

He is very sensitive…“: Julie de Bona makes rare and tender confidences about her 6-year-old son and her role as a mother

Our colleagues then asked him if his son had seen this feature film. “No, it's too small” she explains. “He is 6 years old and he is afraid of everything, even cartoons. He is very sensitive. But he comes regularly to my shoots, his dad sometimes goes with him so we can see each other. He knows my job, but for him, it's a job like any other“. Asked about the kind of mother she is, Julie de Bona explains: “I think I'm a worried, playful, protective mom… a little too much. I have to let him grow so that he has confidence in himself. It's really a tension sometimes, because I want to preserve it” she concludes.

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