04/18/1932
Saint-Quentin, Aisne, France:
Nadine de Rothschild (née Nadine Nelly Jeannette Lhopitalier; born 18 April 1932) is a French author and former actress. She is the widow of banker Edmond Adolphe de Rothschild, a member of the Rothschild family. Nadine Lhopitalier was born in Saint-Quentin, Aisne, France. She never met her father. At 14 years-old, she left her mother's house and worked in a Peugeot factory. 2 years later, at 16, she became the model of the painter Jean-Gabriel Domergue, a socialite who opened the door for her to the worlds of theater and film. In 1952, she began her acting career under the pseudonym of Nadine Tallier and played various roles from 1952 to 1964. In 1958, she started a romantic relationship with the son of Clement Callingham and Norah Docker. In 1962, two years before ending her career in film, she married Edmond Adolphe de Rothschild of the French branch of the Rothschild family. At the time, Edmond was chairman and principal owner of the Edmond de Rothschild Group, a private banking group headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland. Although she was raised Roman Catholic, she converted to Judaism stating: "It would not have been possible to have the name Rothschild and be a Catholic... Nor would it be right for the son of a Rothschild to be half-Jewish and half-Catholic." They had one son born in 1963, Benjamin de Rothschild (1963-2021), shortly after their marriage. Following her husband's death in 1997, David Rockefeller proposed to her but she refused. Lhopitalier used the noble title of her husband (Baroness), issued to the Rothschild family under the Second French Empire. She wrote a book about manners (Le Bonheur de Séduire l'Art de Réussir) and her autobiography (La baronne rentre à cinq heures). In addition, Lhopitalier provided some reviews in the press on the same subject. In 2004, she opened the Nadine de Rothschild International Way of Life Academy in Geneva, Switzerland. In 2014, she held 17% of the holding's capital and 7% of the voting rights of Edmond de Rothschild Group. In disagreement with her daughter-in-law Ariane de Rothschild, she transferred her share of the family fortune to the Swiss private bank Pictet in 2014 and 2019. Source: Article "Nadine de Rothschild" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
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Deuxième Bureau contre terroristes (1961) as Claire |
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The Treasure of San Teresa (1959) as Zizi |
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Visa pour l'enfer (1959) as Clémentine |
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Los cobardes (1959) as María |
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Cigarettes, whisky et p'tites pépées (1959) as Arlette, resident of the institute |
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Les Grandes Familles (1958) as Sylvaine Dual, l'amie de Maublanc |
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Girls at Sea (1958) as Antoinette |
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En bordée (1958) as Mugette |
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Donnez-moi ma chance (1957) as Kiki |
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Comme un cheveu sur la soupe (1957) as Juliette |
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Cinq millions comptant (1957) as Céleste |
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Miss Catastrophe (1957) as Arlette |
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Notre-Dame de Paris (1956) as Une fille à la 'Cour des Miracles' (uncredited) |
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L'homme et l'enfant (1956) as Pitel |
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Folies-Bergère (1956) as Sonia |
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Fernand cow-boy (1956) as Annie |
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En effeuillant la marguerite (1956) as Magali |
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Ce soir les jupons volent... (1956) as Tania la remplaçante de Catherine |
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Les Truands (1956) as Une femme de Jim |
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Vous pigez ? (1955) as Amanda |
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Madame du Barry (1954) as Loque |
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Les hommes ne pensent qu'à ça… (1954) as Woman in her bathtub |
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Ma petite folie (1954) as Suzanne |
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Une vie de garçon (1953) as |
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Les enfants de l'amour (1953) as Lulu |
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Femmes de Paris (1953) as Poupette, presenter of the show |
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Manina, la fille sans voiles (1952) as Mathilda |
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Ouvert contre X… (1952) as Amélie, la soubrette (uncredited) |
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Coiffeur pour dames (1952) as Mlle Mado |
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Nez de cuir (1952) as |
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Le Passage de Vénus (1951) as Gisèle |
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Boniface somnambule (1951) as Ginette, saleswoman at Berthès stores (uncredited) |
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Caroline chérie (1951) as La doublure de Martine Carol |
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Quai de Grenelle (1950) as (uncredited) |
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Au royaume des cieux (1949) as Resident of the Maison Haute Mère |
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Mission à Tanger (1949) as Young woman in the cabaret (uncredited) |