|
| • | "She puffed on an unlighted cigarette in desperation", New York Times, Jun. 29, '03 |
|
| • | "'Do you mind if I smoke?' 'I'd be disappointed if you didn't', I had to confess to Ludivine Sagnier ... she laughs again. Just enough time for another cigarette", New City Chicago, Jul. 2, '03
|
|
| • | "What was it like working on what I presume was a enormous production? 'It was unbelievable. It is shot very far away and we work fifteen hours a day and we don't get to smoke in the studio'", Criticdoctor.com, Jul. 3, '03
|
|
| • | "'When I was nine, I took part in a robbery,' says Sagnier. 'A group of us broke into a house we used to call the Haunted House. We found lots of souvenirs from World War II, Russian cigarettes and things like that; that was when I started smoking. Then my mum found out and scolded me lots. I promised myself then that I would never steal again.'", Mail on Sunday (Night & Day magazine) (UK), Aug. 17, '03 |
|
| • | "'Yes, puppet! Sorry!' she laughs, taking a deep drag on her cigarette. If she's not smoking a cigarette, she's waving one around unlit", The Times (UK), Aug. 21, '03 |
|
| • | "Sagnier: 'Do you mind if I smoke' ... 'no go ahead'. Sagnier: 'Good'", Reelmoviecritic.com, '03
|
|
| • | "her sexy French-accented, cigarette-toasted drawl", Straits Times (Singapore), Sep. 17, '03 |
|
| • | "Unequivocally Europe's most hopeful Hollywood starlet, she is unjaded, candid and fresh. And polite. She asks permission before she lights a cigarette, the first of many, then constantly brushes the smoke away from my face", Sydney Sun Herald (Australia), Oct. 19, '03 |
|
| • | "She asks permission before she lights a cigarette, the first of many, then constantly brushes the smoke away from my face,", Sunday Life (Melbourne, Australia), Oct. '03 |
|
| • | "whose English flows throaty and cognac-rich, leaves the words hanging in the air like the smoke from her cigarette", Sunday Times (UK), Dec. 21, '03
|
|
| • | "The nicotine-crazy actress avoids France's Gitanes and Galoises for made-in-the-U.S.A. smokes.", Esquire, Dec. '03, p. 43 |
|
| • | "one boy thought I was going to be his girlfriend. I lit up a cigarette and he asked, 'does your mum know you smoke?'", Dazed & Confused magazine (UK), Dec. '03 |
|
| • | "Did you stop smoking? Yes, during my pregnancy. But I took it up again. Sorry, I'm not a good example to quote. But I don't smoke in front of [my daughter]", Telestar (France), Aug. 29, '05
|
|
| • | "Ludivine Sagnier, her hair wet and matted in a bun, breezes into a hotel here just after noon, slithers onto a white leather sofa and fishes a cigarette out of her Miu Miu bag.", Womens Wear Daily, Oct. 6, '05 |
|
| • | "lighting the first of many cigarettes", Nylon Magazine, Oct. '05 |
|
| • | "Spike caught her smoking and he was shocked. He told me: 'You should probably tell Ludivine's mother that she smokes.'", The Australian, Dec. 6, '06 |
|
| • | quit - "where, not so long ago, Sagnier was extolling the virtues of smoking, drinking and gourmet food in a sort of 'up yours, Delors' to the body-perfect, bleached-teeth ideal of American cinema, not so any more, she says. 'Aaahhh, I changed so much,' she chuckles. 'I used to be a kind of a Lily Allen type, but now I'm a mum, so...' According to her, the fags are out and the gym is in", Times (UK), Jul. 19, '09
|
|
| • | quit - "I thought you were a bit of a wild child, extolling the virtues of smoking, drinking, eating gourmet food and not going to the gym. LS: Aaaggghhh, I changed so much. I used to be a kind of a Lily Allen type, but now I'm a mum, so I go to the gym, I don't smoke anymore. Its not because I want to be healthy it's because my husband is like the Taliban", LondonNet, Jul. 29, '09
|
|
| • | quit - "I stopped smoking", Daily Telegraph (UK), Aug. 22, '09
|
|
| • | "she arrives for an interview at a Beverly Hills hotel dressed casually in loose slacks and a baggy cardigan, cigarettes at the ready", Los Angeles Times, Aug. 23, '11
|
|
| • | "that Marlboro-induced rasp", Playboy, when?
|
|
| • | "I've always smoked American cigarettes. The American tobacco industry is very rich thanks to the French people. We die for you!", Playboy, when?
|