[1] Despite Lazare Lévy’s dismissal by the Vichy government during the war, Agnelle continued her studies at the Conservatoire and was awarded her Premier Prix in 1942.
[1] After the war, Bundervoët quickly became a soloist of the great symphonic orchestras under the greatest conductors of her time, including Paul Paray, Eugène Bigot, Charles Bruck, and Pierre-Michel Le Conte.
[4] She received the Grand Prix International du Disque (Académie Charles-Cros) with a Johann Sebastian Bach recital published by Ducretet Thomson.
As a result, she was exclusively invited by Decca in France to produce three LPs, Liszt, Brahms, and Schumann.
[2][1] Bundervoët was divorced in 1956 and in the late 1950s began a longterm relationship with Egyptologist Maurice Braun, with whom she travelled to Egypt and other areas of the world.