INTERVIEW

She makes fun of fashions, men and stilettos, sings, dances. All in his new one woman show, Long live tomorrow! from the 17th of January at the Théâtre des Variétés in Paris. To present it, Michèle Bernier was the guest of the Grand Journal of the evening - Philippe Vandel's weekend .

Grandmother. The humorist wanted to twist his neck with a morose climate. "The starting point is that we're a little fed up with hearing 'It was better before', we had the feeling that it was a concept that prevented us from moving forward, sourness in the heart. " So the humorist has put himself in mind to make an "optimistic" show. And the fact that she became a grandmother is not for nothing: "I do not want to tell my grandchildren that it's over, that the world is so rotten that we will nothing, I want hope. "

"We only talk about machines". So, Michèle Bernier laughs. Of herself too, who has passed the 60 years mark and who describes herself as being dumped with "the new technologies", and dares to pass the multiplication of "platforms, registration kiosks", instead turnkeys, real people. "We only talk machines, we can not even yell them so it's very sad," she slips, having fun in turn of 'it was better before'.

"Think differently" Written for about a year, the show has the merit of sticking to the news and the insurrection of "yellow vests", which describe a world that will be worse for their children. "We see that we are in a sort of bottleneck and that we need to change things, it is up to these young people to think differently." As the world changes, I want to say "Long live tomorrow 'We must be mutants and not people who stay on their past,' sums up the humorist, positive. And ensures that at the exit, the public does not say "Michèle Bernier it was better before."