Photos From the Set of “The Young Girls of Rochefort” (1967)
The Young Girls of Rochefort (Les Demoiselles de Rochefort) is a 1967 French musical comedy directed by Jacques Demy. A companion piece to Demy’s earlier The Umbrellas of Cherbourg, the film is celebrated for its pastel-colored aesthetic, jazzy score, and tribute to the golden age of Hollywood musicals.
Set
over a single weekend in the seaside town of Rochefort, the story
follows Delphine and Solange Garnier, twin sisters who teach dance and
music while dreaming of finding love and artistic careers in Paris. As a
carnival comes to town, a series of missed connections and near-misses
unfold, with characters often narrowly avoiding their ideal partners
until the final moments.
Played by real-life
sisters Catherine Deneuve and Françoise Dorléac. Tragically, Dorléac
died in a car accident just months after the film's release. The film
features Hollywood legends Gene Kelly as an American pianist and George
Chakiris (West Side Story) as a carnival worker.
Composed
by Michel Legrand. Notably, Danielle Darrieux (playing the twins’
mother) was the only cast member who sang her own parts; others were
dubbed by professional singers. To achieve Demy’s vision of a “pastel
paradise,” production designer Bernard Evein repainted 40,000 square
meters of Rochefort's city facades.
The film is
considered a masterpiece of the French New Wave’s later years, blending
whimsical optimism with subtle themes of military presence and social
change. A stage musical based on the film was produced in France in
2003, adapted by Alain Boublil and directed by Daniel Moyne. It is now
widely regarded as one of the best musical movies all of time, one of
the best films out of French cinema, one of the best pictures of the
1967, of the 1960s, as well of the 20th century and Demy’s best film
alongside The Umbrellas of Cherbourg (1964).



















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