Alexis Patri 3:17 p.m., October 13, 2021, modified at 3:18 p.m., October 13, 2021

At the microphone of Isabelle Morizet in the show "There is not only one life in life" Saturday, the writer and actress Isabelle Carré looks back on her personal and professional journey.

And in particular on his emancipation at the age of 15, granted by his parents at his request.

A landmark episode that did not bring him the freedom imagined.

INTERVIEW

Many teenagers once asked for it.

Seriously or not.

Few have obtained it.

Isabelle Carré is one of those rare.

The year of these 15 years, the future actress asks to be emancipated and to live alone.

His parents grant him.

But the experience will prove to be less liberating than she had hoped, as she explained on Saturday on Europe 1, on the occasion of her invitation to Isabelle Morizet's show 

Il ya pas que a lifetime in a lifetime

.

>> Find Isabelle Morizet's shows every weekend from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. on Europe 1 as well as in podcast and replay here

In her novel 

Les

Rêveurs, released in 2018, Isabelle Carré writes: "Suddenly, at the age of 15, I was employed to be the guardian of myself."

An affirmation that she renews today.

"I was scared at night, all alone," she recalls.

"It was too early. I wasn't ready, so I got up to go and see if there was anyone behind the door."

An "Isabelle Carré paradox"

"In reality, what was I dreaming of and of which I was afraid at the same time? It was who is someone behind the door", she indicates to express both her fear that the stranger is watching her and her desire for a loved one to come and pick her up to bring her back to the family home. "I had become a kind of sentinels of myself!", She laughs today.

Why did her parents accept such a request from their teenage daughter?

Did she imagine him stronger than she was?

"Strong, I should have been without a doubt. People often describe me as a mixture of strength and fragility," says Isabelle Carré.

This is immediately confirmed by Bernard Campan, who came with her to present the play 

The Tasting

 where the two respond: "It's the Isabelle paradox, vulnerability and strength at the same time."