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  1. Marie Louise Lévêque de Vilmorin was a French novelist, poet and journalist. Vilmorin was best known as a writer of delicate but mordant tales, often set in aristocratic or artistic milieu.

  2. Apr 4, 2017 · Elégance printanière pour ce rendez-vous impromptu entre Louise de Vilmorin et Catherine Charbon au détour d'une rue. La femme de lettres française est à Gen...

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    • Les archives de la RTS
  3. Born 4 April 1902 in the family château at Verrières-le-Buisson, Essonne, a suburb southwest of Paris, she was heir to a great French seed company fortune, that of Vilmorin. She was afflicted with a slight limp that became a personal trademark. Louise was the younger daughter of Philippe de Vilmorin (1872–1917) by his wife Berthe Marie ...

  4. Merci à Éléa pour cette lecture douce, tellement tellement douce de ce magnifique poème.Produit, mixé et monté par Alexandra Chaigneau

  5. Louise Lévêque de Vilmorin was a French novelist, poet, and journalist whose most famous novel, “Madame de,” was the basis for Max Ophuls’s THE EARRINGS OF MADAME DE . . . In this interview from the November 20, 1965, episode of the French television series “Démons et merveilles du cinéma,” she s...

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  6. Louise Lévêque de Vilmorin was a French novelist, poet, and journalist whose most famous novel, “Madame de,” was the basis for Max Ophuls’s THE EARRINGS OF MADAME DE . . . In this interview from the November 20, 1965, episode of the French television series “Démons et merveilles du cinéma,” she shares her thoughts on Ophuls’s adaptation.

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  8. The sleight of hand is dazzling, but fatally distracting...With a supple, ingenious, glittering flow of images that is aesthetically the diametric opposite of Mme. de Vilmorin's chaste prose, he has made the film an excuse for a succession of rich, decorative displays...In all this visual frou-frou it is not surprising that the characters become lost and the interior development of the drama ...

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