Luc Bruyère, the Parisian multi-disciplinary Luc Bruyère, known as Lucky Love, boasts a resume that consists of visual arts, dancing, cinema, photography, fashion and music.
After studying art at the Institut Saint-Luc in Brussels, he went on to collaborate with visual artists such as Olafur Eliasson and Kader Attia. He stood out as a talented dancer while working with choreographer Carolyn Carlson all the way to Paris Opera to perform a duet with prima ballerina Marie- Agnès Gillot. He graduated from the performance arts school Cours Florent and went on to start a brilliant career in theatre before turning to arthouse films. An editorial shoot for Vogue Paris by fashion photographer Craig McDean propelled him into the world of fashion; to the catwalks of Lanvin, Kenzo and Dior, as well as in Nike campaigns.
Music was always a part of Lucky Love, first appearing in the form of poems he wrote as a teenager and later when he sang acapella for the first time on stage, aged 22 in David Bobée’s Elephant man play, a song he had written himself. It followed him to the Parisian cabaret Madame Arthur where he played a drag queen in "Vénus de mille hommes". Music became a form of therapeutic comfort for him when in 2020, as he travelled between Paris and Berlin, he started writing one by one the six songs that would end up making it to his first EP, aptly- titled Tendresse.
Lucky Love is more than just a stage name, it’s a way for the young man, born with one arm, to stress how these two words can symbolise a world of opportunities. Not lucky as in a roll of dice, but lucky to be alive. He pours himself body and soul into his art as in a full-blooded drama, playing the part of writer, singer as well as embodying the stage where good and evil, black and white come together in harmony.
Luc Bruyère, the Parisian multi-disciplinary Luc Bruyère, known as Lucky Love, boasts a resume that consists of visual arts, dancing, cinema, photography, fashion and music.
After studying art at the Institut Saint-Luc in Brussels, he went on to collaborate with visual artists such as Olafur Eliasson and Kader Attia. He stood out as a talented dancer while working with choreographer Carolyn Carlson all the way to Paris Opera to perform a duet with prima ballerina Marie- Agnès Gillot. He graduated from the performance arts school Cours Florent and went on to start a brilliant career in theatre before turning to arthouse films. An editorial shoot for Vogue Paris by fashion photographer Craig McDean propelled him into the world of fashion; to the catwalks of Lanvin, Kenzo and Dior, as well as in Nike campaigns.
Music was always a part of Lucky Love, first appearing in the form of poems he wrote as a teenager and later when he sang acapella for the first time on stage, aged 22 in David Bobée’s Elephant man play, a song he had written himself. It followed him to the Parisian cabaret Madame Arthur where he played a drag queen in "Vénus de mille hommes". Music became a form of therapeutic comfort for him when in 2020, as he travelled between Paris and Berlin, he started writing one by one the six songs that would end up making it to his first EP, aptly- titled Tendresse.
Lucky Love is more than just a stage name, it’s a way for the young man, born with one arm, to stress how these two words can symbolise a world of opportunities. Not lucky as in a roll of dice, but lucky to be alive. He pours himself body and soul into his art as in a full-blooded drama, playing the part of writer, singer as well as embodying the stage where good and evil, black and white come together in harmony.
Height | 6' 1'' - 185cm |
Chest | 38'' - 96.5cm |
Waist | 30'' - 76cm |
Shoe | 44 eu/10 us/9.5 uk |