CERTIFICATES – They have a famous father or mother and decided to follow in their footsteps. But it is not so easy to face the gaze of others. What do they claim? Their business, name and surname.
They have chosen the same profession as their father or mother, a recognized person, sometimes famous, in their field, but they are not called “daughters”. A legacy that sometimes takes a heavy toll. And fake legitimacy. It’s always the same story. When Cecile Pivot attends a book fair, two of the three visitors ask about her father Bernard’s health, or speak with a trembling voice. Apostrophes And culture broth, two shows that made the journalist and man of letters a television icon. Without a word about the latest novel of the svelte 57-year-old writer, My acrobat (Ed. Calmann-Lévy). Sometimes, rarely, he breaks down. “I’m sometimes like, ‘No, I’m not his daughter,'” she slips. When the newspaper presents him with a portrait, it is also exceptional that his origin is not visible from the first lines. “I don’t know what character I’m projecting, or even if I have one of my own,” confides Cecil. I feel like someone is judging me…
Source: Le Figaro