Jane Birkin Remembered: How Serge Gainsbourg’s Muse Eventually Took Control of Her Own Image
With Jane Birkins passing, France loses both an icon and one of its greatest enigmas. To focus on France is not to diminish the fact that Birkins death will be mourned around the world. Alongside Brigitte Bardot, Franoise Hardy and Catherine Deneuve, Birkin was one of the last surviving 1960s femmes who sparked global interest in French culture.
Except that Birkin wasnt French. She was born in London and clung to her English accent all her life. Birkin was perfectly fluent, but cultivated a faux-naf way of speaking her adopted language that reinforced her persona as the eternal child. For the French, it was all part of her singular charm, established decades earlier and which she sometimes struggled to escape.
As partner and muse to Svengali-like songwriting genius Serge Gainsbourg, Birkin posed for the cover of his Histoire de Melody Nelson album, wearing only a red wig and open-waisted blue jeans, a plush monkey clutched to her bare chest. Two years earlier, she recorded the erotic duet Je taime moi non plus, originally written for Bardot. Those are Birkins ecstatic moans that echo over the scandalous tracks final seconds, which led to its being censored in various corners and condemned by the Vatican.
Jane met Serge on the film Slogan, a fun if disposable 1969 comedy about a middle-aged ad man tempted to abandon his pregnant wife after he falls for a much-younger nymphet (played by guess who). This reluctant sex symbol, whod dared to appear nude in Antonionis Blow-Up and played the naive teen Alain Delon seduces in La piscine, was never a great actor she had neither the training nor the range to dramatically transform herself for a role but she possessed that far rarer, ineffable quality of the star. When audiences looked at Jane Birkin on screen, they saw Jane Birkin or they saw the figure Jane Birkin allowed audiences to believe was the real her, and which may have actually been an elaborate lifelong performance.
That paradox was key to her appeal. Was Birkin a doll molded by the men in her life, or was she an artist with an instinctive talent? Both were true. Birkins own journals, collected and published as The Munkey Diaries, reveal far less than fans demanded. Gainsbourg may have encouraged Birkin to make herself ubiquitous (as she did, appearing in ad campaigns and throwaway comedies), but she gradually took control of her own image.
All along, Birkin was deeply insecure, as we discover in her two most revealing screen credits: Jane B. par Agns V. and Jane by Charlotte. The first is a playful postmodern pseudo-documentary on Birkin by pioneering French director Agns Varda, who fashions the project to look like the sort of star portraits that audiences might see on TV, alternating personal interviews (in which the woman opens up in the presence of another woman) with clips of her most famous roles as Joan of Arc or mythological Greek princess Ariadne, a crime-movie femme fatale or pie-faced silent comedian only, Birkin had never been cast in any of those parts. This manufactured B-roll material was shot specifically for the film, as Varda gave the star, then in her early 40s, a chance to play the roles shed been denied. (The movie is now streaming on the Criterion Channel.)
By contrast, Jane by Charlotte is a real documentary, made by the daughter of her 12-year relationship with Serge. Charlotte Gainsbourg is one of the most daring and versatile actors working today, but she can only get so much out of her mother, whod been filmed and photographed, ogled and objectified, so much of her life. At a certain point in the 1980s, she rebelled against the reductive way the world saw her. She chopped off her hair (its short in Vardas film) and insisted on giving a live concert at Paris Bataclan.
Previous performances had involved pantomiming to pre-recorded audio; Birkin had something to prove. Back in the 60s and 70s, she had embodied a new kind of sex symbol: an ambassador of Swinging London in France. Where Bardot was voluptuous, Birkin was tomboyish: the garonne described in Melody Nelson. Tall and slender, with bony hips and flat breasts, Birkin did not consider herself attractive (this was long before Kate Moss made heroin chic a desirable aesthetic). The public disagreed, of course, and blue-eyed, gap-toothed Jane Birkin types still thrive year after year in French cinema all because she agreed to pose as Gainsbourgs underage nymphette.
Serges lyrics told of a 14-year-old the singer he struck with his Rolls Royce, then seduced a provocation that raised eyebrows at the time and which todays hyper-sensitivity simply wouldnt permit. Decades later, after collaborating with Varda on Jane B., Birkin got to play the predator in the surprisingly non-scandalous Kung Fu Master, in which her character falls in love with an underage boy (played by Vardas son, Mathieu Demy).
Though painfully shy in real life, Birkin pushed herself for the sake of art. She played a gamine diner waitress just androgynous enough to seduce a gay truck driver in Gainsbourgs directorial debut, Je taime moi non plus (like the song). Gainsbourg considered playing the role himself, but ultimately enlisted Joe DAllesandro, the resident stud of Andy Warhols stable.
If that sounds strange, consider Birkins scenes in Roger Vadims Don Juan, or If Don Juan Were a Woman (also available on the Criterion Channel). Bardot plays the title character, who takes Birkin to bed. Its arguably the sexiest image in all of French cinema (though La piscine comes close), complicated by the fact were watching Gainsbourgs girlfriend getting it on with his ex, whod been previously married to Vadim. To say that those were different times would be an understatement.
Birkin may have been an object at the outset of her career, but midway through her life, she showed with intelligence and class that she was in charge. By retaking her reputation and building a wall around her secrets, Birkin became all the more intriguing.