Marie-Anne Chazel became known to the public thanks to Splendid. Even today, she remembers her beginnings as if it were yesterday. “My first memory with Le Splendid, I went on tour with them and we did a sketch show. I especially remember the wine, because it was in Gigondas and the first evening we played, I had an absolutely monumental drunk. Me who absolutely never drank! It's not very artistic!she confided to
Purepeople.
Marie-Anne Chazel opens up about the couple
Still for our colleagues, the one who was in a relationship with Christian Clavier revealed the secrets for a relationship to last, according to her. “The argument is a catharsis which allows you to be liberated I think, because afterwards you can reconcile and that’s good, reconciliations”she declared before specifying that the proverb “Birds of a feather flock together.” wasn't that good for her.
“If you find your complete alter-ego in front of you, I wonder if boredom doesn't set in very quickly.
It moves you to have someone in front of you who doesn't like and who doesn't think the same things. It's a topic of conversation.”explained Marie-Anne Chazel.
His meeting with Michel Leeb
Last September, Marie-Anne Chazel went to the premises of Europe 1 as part of the promotion of the play
Talk to me about love by Philippe Claudel. A play in which she plays with Michel Leeb for the very first time.
“We had crossed paths, I had seen him very often in his shows (…) but we said to ourselves that it would be great for us to play and that never came up”she confided to start.
“And then one day, he called me and he offered me this piece because he knew Claudel, the text and he asked me if I had fun doing it, I read it and I I said: 'Of course' he's a wonderful theater actor, I saw him… Both very fair and very funny and I really wanted to be a couple with him.”she later revealed.
Marie-Anne Chazel reveals why she never married
During this interview, the one who gave a strong opinion on Nolwenn Leroy also revealed why she always refused to get married.
“As time goes by and I'm no longer 22 and a half, I say to myself: 'Why, but why?'”she then asked herself at the microphone of Europe 1.
A question to which the answer was obvious. “It's because I'm part of a generation where we discovered real freedom, real independence compared to our mothers' generation, etc. and I had the impression – perhaps because of the experiences I saw around me – that marriage was a way of blocking both and making them less demanding in their romantic relationships, in their demands, in their expectations. I had the feeling that we were going to settle into a kind of daily routine, a less demanding and more mediocre routine.“she added later.