Career
In the 1960s she was the head of a French network of call girls who worked especially for dignitaries and civil servants. Born on 6 July 1923 in Angers, France, Fernande Grudet was reared in a convent by nuns. After acting as an agent of the Resistance during the German Occupation of Franceduring World World War II and doing several other jobs, she created her exclusive prostitution network in Paris during the 1960s.
At this time she ran a brothel in the expensive 16th arrondissement of Paris.
"There are two things that people will always pay for: food and sexual I wasn"t any good at cooking", she is reputed to have said.
Her address book, Grudet claimed, had included the names of the Shah of Iran, John F. Kennedy, and Gianni Agnelli, the one-time head of Fiat. In 1976, the judge Jean-Louis Bruguière began dismantling Grudet"s organization.
She was being pursued for unpaid taxes, amounting to 11m francs (around £49m), and fled to Los Angeles, but returned to France in 1986, serving a four month jail sentence.
After her release, she attempted to set up a new prostitution organization, but in 1992 she was sentenced to a term in Fleury-Mérogis Prison for procuring. The history of Madame Claude has inspired many writers. Her life was the basis of the feature film, Madame Claude (1977), directed by Just Jaeckin, and starring Françoise Fabian.
Grudet died in Nice on 19 December 2015.