When Brigitte Bardot passed away on December 28, 2025, at the age
of 91 in her beloved home of Saint-Tropez, France did not simply lose a
former actress—it lost one of its most enduring cultural symbols. From
global screen icon and fashion muse to fierce and often controversial
animal-rights campaigner, Bardot’s life left behind a legacy far larger
than cinema.
At the center of that legacy stood La Madrague, her legendary seaside villa in Saint-Tropez, a place inseparable from her name and mystique. Reports following her death confirmed that while her estate would be divided between family and charitable interests, La Madrague itself had long been intended for the Brigitte Bardot Foundation, the institution that became the true mission of her later life.
At the center of that legacy stood La Madrague, her legendary seaside villa in Saint-Tropez, a place inseparable from her name and mystique. Reports following her death confirmed that while her estate would be divided between family and charitable interests, La Madrague itself had long been intended for the Brigitte Bardot Foundation, the institution that became the true mission of her later life.
Contrary to some early confusion, Bardot’s inheritance was
never simply a matter of celebrity wealth passing to heirs. Her son,
Nicolas-Jacques Charrier, remained a principal legal heir to a
significant portion of her estate, while her husband, Bernard d’Ormale,
her partner since the early 1990s and later president of her Foundation,
remained central to preserving her wishes and continuing her work.
The Foundation’s long-serving leadership emphasized that the succession had been carefully prepared well in advance, with inventories completed and family coordination handled to avoid the kind of bitter inheritance wars often seen in other famous French families. The goal was clear: protect both family stability and the future of the cause Bardot valued above all else—animal protection.
The Foundation’s long-serving leadership emphasized that the succession had been carefully prepared well in advance, with inventories completed and family coordination handled to avoid the kind of bitter inheritance wars often seen in other famous French families. The goal was clear: protect both family stability and the future of the cause Bardot valued above all else—animal protection.
That cause defined her
final decades far more than film ever did. After retiring from acting in
1973, Bardot increasingly distanced herself from celebrity life and
dedicated herself almost entirely to animal welfare.
She founded the Brigitte Bardot Foundation
in 1986 and personally financed much of its work, even using proceeds
from her own assets to support rescue operations, sanctuaries, and
international campaigns against cruelty. In many ways, La Madrague
transformed from a glamorous Riviera symbol into the emotional
headquarters of that mission—a private refuge, but also a symbol of what
she wanted to leave behind.
Of course, Bardot’s legacy
remains complicated. Admired for her beauty, independence, and lifelong
activism, she was also repeatedly criticized and legally condemned for
inflammatory public remarks and convictions related to inciting racial
hatred. Her public image in later life became deeply polarizing,
dividing admirers of her humanitarian work from critics of her political
and social statements. Yet even those controversies could not erase her
extraordinary cultural footprint. She remained, undeniably, one of the
most recognizable French women of the twentieth century.
And so, the future of La Madrague
is perhaps fittingly not just about inheritance, but about intention.
It is not merely a villa changing hands—it is the preservation of a
symbol.
Rather than becoming another celebrity estate fractured by
disputes, it stands as part of a carefully structured transition between
private memory and public mission.
In death, as in life, Brigitte Bardot ensured that her greatest possession would continue serving what she believed mattered most: defending those without a voice.
In death, as in life, Brigitte Bardot ensured that her greatest possession would continue serving what she believed mattered most: defending those without a voice.









