Mareva Galanter and Helena Noguerra have shared a wonderful friendship for several years. The two women also collaborated on the new Miss France 1999 album. Paris-Tahiti. Secondly, she sings songs written by the Belgian actress, especially about the change in the life of the Papeete native, who joined Paris at the age of 18 in the late 90s. Helena Noguerra also had an eventful youth, as she left Belgium at the age of 15 to settle in New York and begin her modeling career.
In addition to having to adjust to a hectic daily life in a new city at a very young age, Mareva Galanter and Helena Noguerra also had to deal with a few inappropriate offers from some guys. So, when Yann Barthès asked them how they did it “escape from toxic guys“, two friends shared their technique: “I had literature. I loved to read and would stay at home with my books. Literature saved me“, initially counting on Helena Noguerra, who, at just 15 years old, received invitations from men much older than her.When I was invited to the fun weekends, the bosses of the agencies, the gentlemen who are sometimes very handsome boys, said, ‘If you are bored this weekend, come to my villa’. And I took a picture of the villa, I saw guys, even if they were 30 years old, I saw old people, cigars, lively girls. I said to myself: ‘Kundera (Milan Kundera, Czech writer, editor’s note) in my room, it will be great. I wasn’t going I didn’t feel in danger, be careful. But it was instinctive. It was true that Kundera was waiting for me, and that was priceless.“
The words that Mareva Galanter finds herself in: “I was exploring a world that wasn’t mine, that wasn’t my culture or my environment. So it’s really kind of weird stuff, we feel a little bit, we say to ourselves: ‘Why is he inviting me? Why is he suggesting that I go for the weekend?’ Frankly, I haven’t come across this kind of situation very often, but when it came to me, I said, ‘No, what am I going to do there, it sounds ridiculous, then I don’t know them, I don’t know.’ I don’t want’.“The person who shared Arthur’s life believes his childhood in Tahiti helped him get through:”I’m a pretty wild person too, so I guess this saved me. My culture at the end of the world meant I was different, and I didn’t have the ambition to get into things that didn’t look like me at all costs and maybe lose me, so I stuck with it. it always was.“
NO
Source: Programme Television

Joseph Fearn is an entertainment and television aficionado who writes for The Fashion Vibes. With a keen eye for what’s hot in the world of TV, Joseph keeps his readers informed about the latest trends and must-see shows.