Brigitte macron to make appearance in new emily in paris series

Brigitte macron to make appearance in new emily in paris series


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‘WE HAD A FANTASTIC TIME TOGETHER. IT WAS A REAL HONOUR,’ SAYS STAR LILY COLLINS Brigitte Macron, the wife of President Emmanuel Macron, is set to cameo in an episode of Emily in Paris, the


smash hit Netflix show starring Lily Collins and Ashley Park. Mrs Macron will appear - very briefly - playing her own role in an episode of the second half of season four. Filming with Mrs


Macron took place in Paris on April 2 on place de la Madeleine, reports Elle magazine, ahead of recent political drama including the dissolution of the Assemblée Nationale, snap legislative


elections, and a newly-appointed PM. Speaking of the Cameo in an interview, Ms Collins said: “She’s a big fan of the show. She invited us to have a meeting [at the Elysée] with her a few


years ago, and she was so kind, and warm and welcoming, and enthusiastic about the show, and wanted to be in it! “And I went, ‘what? Uh, OK!’. And Darren [Star, the series director] and I


were like: ‘We’ve gotta make it happen!’, and having her on, that was so fun, she improv’d…we had a fantastic time together. It was a real honour.” Mrs Macron has said she watched the first


three seasons, and the first part of the fourth, and added that Mr Macron also watched an episode when the first season was released in 2020. Read also: Netflix’s Emily boosts Americans’


opinion of Paris, poll shows  Read also: Meet the woman who inspired Netflix’s 'Emily in Paris'  “From the outset, I imagined Emily in Paris as a love letter to France,” said Mr


Star to Elle. “I see it as recognition of the impact of the series on the attractiveness of France. [Mrs Macron took part] with talent.”  [embedded content] ‘QUELLE HORREUR’? Emily in Paris


tells the story of Emily Cooper - played by Lily Collins (who is, incidentally, the daughter of musician Phil Collins) - an American marketing manager from Chicago who is hired to work in


Paris to give ‘an American perspective’ to the agency.  Yet, her very American attitude is not always welcome in the city, her colourful high-fashion clothes mark her out as ‘non-French’


(compared to her ‘chic’, more monochrome colleagues), and her love life also presents no end of drama. The series has a 62% score on the review site Rotten Tomatoes, and a 6.9 out of 10


rating on the respected media site IMDB. Overall, it has mixed reviews, with one critic saying: “It doesn’t take itself too seriously, and neither should we,” but another writing: “If you


can make it past the first episode, you're braver than me. Quelle horreur!”  Some critics appreciate its ‘fluffy’ style and feel that it is a ‘guilty pleasure’; but others strongly


disagree, saying that the show is clichéd, shallow, and ‘cringeworthy’, and shows a sanitised, glossy, ‘Americanised’ version of France that does not exist. Read also: I’m Parisian: Here’s


my view on the clichéd vision of Emily in Paris  The second part of the fourth season will be released on Netflix on September 12.