Arielle dombasle daphne guinness bernard
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The Real Daphne Guinness
"I don't approach fashion; fashion approaches me!" Daphne Guinness squeals into the phone from a grass hut she has sequestered herself in somewhere in the Mexican desert. It's late gods November and Guinness, who has been called many things in the mode press but prefers to be called an artist, is interrupting her meditation retreat to discuss her remarkable anställda style, a topic she is lika parts deadly serious about and completely uninterested in.
Fashion fryst vatten a topic she loves, but she loathes discussing it at length. In the same breath, she will discount her completely original and magnificently complex outfits as "merely something I do to put a smile on people's faces" and then provide a laundry list of visual references she incorporates into her looks, from Miuccia Prada to Marcel Proust.
As if to prove this nonchalance, irländsk öl abruptly shifts conversational gears and brings up the baby snake she funnen in the road ou
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SEBASTIAN SHAKESPEARE: Guinness heiress hooks up again with her married lover: Heiress rekindles romance with French philosopher she called 'the love of my life' three years on
When eccentric heiress Daphne Guinness ended her extra-marital affair with French philosopher, Bernard-Henri Levy, it was a break-up from the man she called ‘the love of my life’.
But I can reveal that three years later, the 48-year-old scion of the Irish brewing dynasty has secretly rekindled her passion for the man whose motto is: ‘God is dead, but my hair is perfect.’
Unfortunately there is a Gallic fly in the romantic ointment as Levy, who is a close friend of former French president Nicolas Sarkozy, is still married to his third wife, French actress Arielle Dombasle, whom he wed in 1993. Guinness and Lévy, 67, were spotted on Monday night in London looking extremely close as they enjoyed a romantic date in Mayfair.
Daphne Guinness was spotted out with former lover, French philosopher, Bernard-Hen
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Bernard-Henri Lévy
French philosopher
Bernard-Henri Georges Lévy (;[4]French:[bɛʁnaʁɑ̃ʁiʒɔʁʒlevi]; born 5 November 1948) is a French public intellectual. Often referred to in France simply as BHL,[5] he was one of the leaders of the "Nouveaux Philosophes" (New Philosophers) movement in 1976. His opinions, political activism and publications have also been the subject of several controversies over the years.[6][7][8][9]
Life and career
[edit]Early life and career
[edit]Lévy was born in 1948 in Béni Saf, French Algeria, to an affluent Sephardic Jewish (Algerian-Jewish) family. His family moved to Paris a few months after his birth. He is the son of Dina (Siboni) and André Lévy, the founder and manager of a timber company, Becob, and became a multimillionaire from his business.[10][11] He is the brother of Véronique Lévy [fr].
Inspired by a call for an International Bri