A fulfilled actress, Cécile Bois is also a fulfilled mother. The actress star of “Candice Renoir” is the mother of two teenagers aged 16 and 14…
When she is not filming new episodes of her series Candice Renoiractress Cécile Bois tries to spend time with her daughters. Did she pass on a taste for comedy to her two teenagers?
Cécile Bois: her daughters following in her footsteps?
Since 2003, the 53-year-old actress has shared her life with actor and voice actor Jean-Pierre Michaël, whom she married in 2016, and with whom she had two daughters named Anaëlle and Joanne. Now aged 16 and 14, the two teenagers are his greatest pride. Cécile Bois revealed in the pages of 7 Days TV if they too dream of becoming actresses and joining show business.
“For the youngest, who is 14, very clearly, everything that is creative interests her: she does theater, knitting, sewing, she writes, she films”confided the star of Candice Renoirwho plays opposite the charming Raphaël Lenglet. Before completing: “As for the 16-year-old eldest, it’s catching up with her: she chose the cinema option, at school, in order to learn how to create sets. I observe her and, as if by chance, she does her homework like never before, she turns it in on time… She is super motivated!”
Cécile Bois mother hen: “I am marked by this love”
Statements which confirm those already made by the actress in the magazine TV Star last January: “I put them in the theater last year. One is not interested in light and spectacle. The other, after telling me for a long time that she wanted to become an actress, is thinking more about directing or screenwriting.”
Like a true mother hen, Cécile Bois never misses an opportunity to talk about her best role. Recently, she dedicated an Instagram post to them. “I have this day tattooed in my stomach. An invisible ink and a curve that remains, which sometimes I hide. I am marked by this love”she first wrote. Before concluding: “You wake up my 14 and 16 year olds, you dust off the time that sneakily slips by, lighting the fuse of possibilities, and it’s a dance. And before your hands let go of me, nothing shakes, I follow you, barefoot.”









