Hiroko Matsumoto Explained

Hiroko Matsumoto
Native Name:松本弘子
Native Name Lang:Japanese
Birth Date:11 August 1936
Birth Place:Tokyo, Japan
Death Place:Paris, France
Nationality:Japanese
Other Names:Hiroko Berghauer, Hiroko Cathalan
Height:1.74 m
Occupation:fashion model
Years Active:1960 - 1967
Known For:Pierre Cardin, Hanae Mori Fashion House
Spouse:
  • (1970s, uncertain)
Children:1

was a Japanese model who worked in Paris during the 1960s. She is considered to be one of the first Japanese supermodels.

Biography

Pierre Cardin met and fell in love with Matsumoto in 1960 during a trip to Japan. She would eventually follow him to Paris where she was Cardin's top model.[1] [2] Known as Miss Hiroko, she was the first ever Japanese model for a French clothing collection.[3] [4]

Matsumoto ended her modeling career in 1967 and married Henry Berghauer, a manager at groupe Pierre Cardin. Berghauer went on to become a manager at Hanae Mori, and later of fashion company Hervé Léger.[5] [6] In 1970, Matsumoto played the prominent part of Kyoko, the Japanese lover, in French director François Truffaut's movie Bed and Board. Many of the dresses worn in the movie were designed by the Hanae Mori fashion company.[7]

A few years later, Hiroko Matsumoto married Jean-Claude Cathalan, who, at the time, was a manager at Roussel Uclaf[8] [9] He later became the president of Revillon, Parfums Caron, Jean-Louis Scherrer[10] and is the current president of Comité Montaigne.[8] [11] Their daughter, Maxime Cathalan, was kidnapped in Neuilly-sur-Seine at the age of 20 months in front of her nurse. The child was returned on 23 June 1975 for a ransom of 1.5 million Franc.[12]

In 2003, Hiroko Cathalan died in Paris at the age of 67 after a long period in the hospital. The cause of her death remains uncertain.[13]

Notes and References

  1. Matthias Gurtler, Pierre Cardin, VSD, 19 July 2006
  2. Jean-Noël Liaut, Cover Girls and Supermodels 1945-1965
  3. Book: Lorenz, Sylvana . 2006. 978-2846121910. Pierre Cardin, son fabuleux destin.
  4. Book: Christopher . Briward . David . Gilbert . 2006. 978-1845204136. Fashion's World Cities.
  5. http://patrimoine.jalougallery.com/lofficiel-de-la-mode-numero_729-page_30-detailp-13-748-30.html L'Officiel de la mode n° 729, 1987, pp. 30–31
  6. http://www.executives.com.fr/direct/executives_cv_et_bio_paiement01gg.asp?lettre=351 Sommaire de la lettre Executives n°351
  7. http://filmotruffaut.chez.com/index.htm Filmotruffaut
  8. Who's Who in France
  9. http://www.club-des-affaires-nrw.org/index.php?view=article&catid=56%3A2010&id=162%3A01122010-la-saga-des-industries-du-luxe-un-atout-pour-la-france&option=com_content&Itemid=105&lang=fr 01.12.2010 – Comité Montaigne: "La Saga des Industries du Luxe: Un atout pour la France"
  10. Jean-Claude Cathalan: "Une démarche très systématique", in L'Anti-Crise, Jean-Pierre Thiollet and M-F Guignard, Dunod, Paris, 1994, pp. 26–28
  11. http://patrimoine.jalougallery.com/lofficiel-de-la-mode-numero_800-page_78-detailp-13-819-78.html L'Officiel de la mode n 800, 1995, pages 78, 79
  12. La Nouvelle République of 23 June 1975: "Maxime Cathalan libérée par ses ravisseurs"
  13. https://beta.japantimes.co.jp/news/2003/06/23/national/obituary-hiroko-matsumoto/ Obituary: Hiroko Matsumoto