Brigitte Bardot quit acting at 39 with a line that sounded almost like a stage direction: she wanted to “get out elegantly.” After two decades as one of the most watched women in European cinema, the beauty famous for her signature bombshell look chose to walk away in 1973 on her own terms.
By then, Bardot had appeared in nearly 50 films — 47 to be exact. In 1973, she confirmed she was retiring from acting “as a way to get out elegantly,” a phrase that ran in newspapers at the time. She later said she was “sick of being beautiful every day” and wanted to turn her attention to abandoned animals instead of cameras and premieres.
The exit had been telegraphed. During the shoot for Don Juan, or If Don Juan Were a Woman, Bardot reportedly told a journalist from The Modesto Bee, “If Don Juan is not my last movie it will be my next to last.” Her final screen role came soon after, in 1973’s The Edifying and Joyous Story of Colinot. In the same year, she also told The Chicago Tribune that she “detest[s] humanity. I have become allergic to it. I see no one. I do not go out. I have created a world of my own, like it was in my childhood.”
By her own account, the problem was less the work than the scrutiny. In a 1990s interview with the International Herald Tribune, Bardot said she “only live[d] in the world of animal protection,” adding that she had “no more friends from those days” and had “stopped making films to look after animals.” She described fame as suffocating and said she knew “what it feels like to be hunted.”

Brigitte Bardot arriving at John F. Kennedy International Airport, c. 1965.
Fairchild Archive/Penske Media/PMC
She later summed it up in a rare interview with Vogue Hommes back in 2012: “I quit the films when I was 38 because I’d had it up to here.” It was another iteration of the explanation she’d return to for decades: the films weren’t what drove her away — the attention did.
What replaced acting was a new, self-created job. Bardot founded the Brigitte Bardot Foundation in 1986, and she helped bankroll its earliest work by selling jewelry and other personal possessions. In her animal rights memoir Tears of Battle, she didn’t soften her reasoning, writing that she “did not want to be part of the human species” as long as animals were treated as expendable — a line that matches how completely she redirected her public life after leaving acting.
Bardot died at her home in Saint-Tropez on Dec. 28, 2025, at the age of 91. In a statement announcing her death, the Brigitte Bardot Foundation said: “The Brigitte Bardot Foundation announces with immense sadness the death of its founder and president, Madame Brigitte Bardot, a world-renowned actress and singer, who chose to abandon her prestigious career to dedicate her life and energy to animal welfare and her foundation.”
Still, her legacy is complicated. After she left acting for good in 1973, she spent the rest of her life on animal welfare campaigns through her foundation. Over those same years, her support for France’s far-right National Rally and the hate-speech convictions she received in French courts drew sustained scrutiny from France and the larger international community.
Before you go, click here to see celebrities who have returned to acting or singing after retiring. 
‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’
‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.sheknows.com ’














