A police car is parked outside Novotel hotel, where jewels meant for film stars were stolen, in Cannes. More than $1mn worth of jewellery due to be lent to movie stars at the Cannes film festival were stolen from a hotel room in the French Riviera town, a police source said. The jewels were in the safe of the room rented by an employee of Chopard, a luxury jeweller, the source said on condition of anonymity.

AFP/Cannes

Some $1.4mn worth of jewellery due to be loaned to stars at the Cannes Film Festival was stolen from a local hotel in a pre-dawn heist yesterday but the coveted Palme d’Or trophy was safe, officials said.

The robbery took place in the hotel room of an American woman employee of Swiss bijou tier Chopard as she was out for the evening, police said.

A strongbox containing jewels was ripped out of the wardrobe and carried off, they said.

The public prosecutor for the Cannes region, Jean-Michel Cailliau, said the loss was estimated at $1.4mn (1mn euros).

But Chopard downplayed the reported value of the jewels and contradicted police reports that they were intended to be worn by stars at Cannes.

The heist occurred before 5am at the Novotel hotel, which is located about 15 minutes from the festival venue, police said.

The Chopard employee was due to be interviewed by police later and investigators were trawling through footage from the city’s security cameras to hunt for clues, they said.

Chopard is one of the official sponsors of the festival, and one of its stores, complete with its own red carpet, lies on the palm-fringed beachfront, just opposite the venue.

The jeweller redesigned the Palme d’Or trophy and each year lends out jewellery to stars for their walk up the red-carpet at the Palais des Festivals.

The photo-calls are hugely valuable to makers of gowns and jewellery, providing media exposure around the world.

Actresses at this year’s festival who have donned Chopard jewellery include Julianne Moore, Lana Del Rey, Cindy Crawford, China’s Fan Bingbing, and Spain’s Blanca Suarez.

Chopard, though, issued a three-paragraph statement saying that it could not give many details because the incident was under investigation.

“We can only let you know that the value of the pieces stolen is far lower than the figures announced in the media,” it said. “The jewels stolen are not part of the collection of jewels that are worn by actresses during the Cannes Film Festival.”

An official linked to the festival said the top award, the Golden Palm, was safe.

The Palme d’Or features 118g (four ounces) of yellow gold, with a value of more than 20,000 euros ($26,000), set in a base of rock crystal.

The history of the trophy dates back to 1955 – by coincidence, the year that Alfred Hitchcock made To Catch A Thief, about a gentleman robber and a jewel heist on the French Riviera.

And in another twist, the robbery took place shortly after the world premiere of The Bling Ring, a true-to-life tale of a group of wealthy teenagers who burgle the homes of Hollywood celebrities.

Last year, thieves made off with four watches worth 400,000 euros ($513,000) belonging to football stars Souleymane Diawara and Mamadou Niang who were in Cannes for the festival.

Three months before this year’s festival, thieves made off with 150 watches, worth around 1mn euros ($1.3mn), from a luxury store on Cannes’ seafront.