The portrait
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Without denying the television that revealed her, the actress, sparkling and funny, puts her enthusiasm at the service of social comedies, revealing the causes that mobilize her.
Where did she go? This overexcited, eccentric, sometimes excessive, borderline clownish Marion? This thirty-year-old never shy of grimaces and facial expressions that could recall Marie-Anne Chazel, in her younger years? Of this character that she played for ten years in the M6 family sitcom Household scenes (distant cousin of One guy, one girl who made her sister take off) only this exuberance and this warm familiarity seem to remain in Audrey Lamy. Those which lead her to speak informally, speak with her hands, laugh often, widen her eyes, which she has large and almond-shaped. Of course, there is always that unique gravelly voice. Exit, the vaudeville skits at the heart of colorful cardboard sets: in recent years, the forty-something has turned to social comedies, portraying a social worker working with homeless women in the Invisibles or a cook in a home for young migrants (the Brigade). Do not deduce left-wing values from this, however: the actress will keep her vote to herself to avoid being “to smash on one side or the other”. She also prefers not to return to this burglary committed at her home by strangers, largely