Table of contents
- Escort Model Alina from Frankfurt
- Escort Model Celine from Berlin
- Contents
- Escort Model Isabelle from Hamburg
- The peninsula and its reputation
- Escort Model Linda from Munich
- Escort Model Lina from Dusseldorf
- Where to stay, dine and be seen
- Escort Model Michelle from Frankfurt
- Culture and calendar: jazz, Picasso, sails
- Escort Model Grace from Frankfurt
- Escort Model Lina from Dusseldorf
- Discretion on the Riviera
- Escort Model Nina from Frankfurt
- Escort Model Anna from Dusseldorf
- Travel escort companionship to Antibes and the Cap
- Escort Model Helena from Munich
- Frequently asked questions
Cap d’Antibes is the most private address on the French Riviera. On this pine-clad peninsula between Cannes and Nice, wealth has kept to itself since the Belle Époque, screened behind tall hedges and wrought-iron gates — those who come here rarely want a grand entrance. They want the discretion that the Cap has quietly made its truest luxury for well over a century.
Between the old town of Antibes, fashionable Juan-les-Pins and the southern tip with its legendary hotel lies one of the few corners of the Côte d’Azur that does not announce its reputation. For a travelling escort who understands that register, the Cap is close to an ideal destination. What follows sets out what defines the place, where to stay and dine, which calendar governs it — and what matters when a cultivated escort girls travels with you.
Contents
- The peninsula and its reputation
- Where to stay, dine and be seen
- Culture and calendar: jazz, Picasso, sails
- Discretion on the Riviera
- Travel companionship to Antibes and the Cap
- Frequently asked questions
The peninsula and its reputation
Cap d’Antibes is a slim, pine-covered peninsula south of the town of Antibes, a little over one and a half square kilometres in size and, since the nineteenth century, a byword for exclusivity. What defines the Cap is less what you can see than what you cannot: Belle Époque villas withdrawn behind walls and cypresses, estates announced only by a closed gate, and a stillness that has become rare elsewhere on the Riviera.
Its mythology belongs to a generation of writers and pleasure-seekers. In the 1920s the American couple Sara and Gerald Murphy persuaded the Hôtel du Cap to open for a whole summer — until then the Côte d’Azur had been a winter resort alone. With them came the names of the Lost Generation: F. Scott Fitzgerald, who set part of Tender Is the Night here, Ernest Hemingway, Gertrude Stein. Guy de Maupassant, Claude Monet and, later, the Duke and Duchess of Windsor all kept an address on the Cap. That faint echo of an elegant, faintly bohemian retreat still hangs over the peninsula, as the record of the place attests.
Explore the Cap on foot and you follow the Sentier du Littoral, the coastal path that runs for roughly two and a half kilometres from the Plage de la Garoupe along the rocky southern shore to the Baie des Milliardaires — the “Billionaires’ Bay”, a name that captures the neighbourhood’s sense of itself rather well. Inland lie the botanical garden of the Villa Thuret and, at the southern point, the neoclassical Villa Eilenroc, designed by Charles Garnier. It is a landscape that does not display its wealth so much as fold it into greenery and stone.
Where to stay, dine and be seen
The first address on the Cap carries a name that stands for the Riviera itself: the Hôtel du Cap-Eden-Roc. Built in 1870 as the Villa Soleil by Le Figaro’s founder, Hippolyte de Villemessant, it became the first house on the Côte d’Azur to open for the summer season; today it belongs to the Oetker Collection. Its icon is the sea-water pool blasted from the rock, ringed by cabanas at the southern tip. During the Cannes Film Festival, only a short boat ride away, part of that circus reliably drifts across to the Cap — otherwise the hotel keeps a confidentiality it once guaranteed the Windsors.
At the western entrance to the peninsula, in Juan-les-Pins, stands the Hôtel Belles Rives — an Art Deco house that has kept its original furnishings and whose bar bears the name of F. Scott Fitzgerald, who spent a summer there on the royalties of The Great Gatsby. For contemporary comfort at the water’s edge, there is the Cap d’Antibes Beach Hotel with its private beach. For the hours in between, the old town of Antibes rewards the walk: the covered Marché Provençal on the Cours Masséna ranks among the liveliest markets in the region, and the lanes behind it lead inevitably to the Château Grimaldi.
The table on the Cap moves between two poles: the classical starred cooking of the great houses and the unhurried Mediterranean spread — grilled fish, a chilled Provençal rosé, a late aperitif looking towards the Îles de Lérins. Either suits an evening that has nothing to prove.
Culture and calendar: jazz, Picasso, sails
The summer’s most important fixture is Jazz à Juan. Since 1960 the festival has gathered the great names of the genre in the Pinède Gould of Juan-les-Pins, beneath the pines and beside the sea — Miles Davis, Ella Fitzgerald, Ray Charles and Nina Simone have all played its stage. The 64th edition runs from 9 to 19 July 2026. It is one of the oldest open-air jazz festivals in Europe and still the moment when the peninsula sets aside its reserve for ten evenings.
The cultural heart of Antibes itself is the Musée Picasso in the Château Grimaldi. In 1946 Pablo Picasso set up his studio here for a few months; on leaving, he made the town a gift of 23 paintings and 44 drawings. In 1966 the castle became the first museum ever devoted to the artist. Its terrace, with sculptures and a view over the Mediterranean, makes the visit far more than a box to tick.
Then there is the maritime calendar: in late May the Voiles d’Antibes brings together some of the finest classic sailing yachts in the world, while Port Vauban, the largest yachting harbour in Europe, remains a stage for the great boats of the Côte d’Azur all year round. For readers who think of the Riviera as a destination in itself, our luxury travel section offers further ideas for stays in this key.
Discretion on the Riviera
The Cap rewards restraint. Where estates disappear behind hedges and houses like the Hôtel du Cap have always assured their guests of confidentiality, any kind of showing-off feels out of place. The right note is a quiet one: well-considered dress without a dress-code anxiety, a conversation about art or sailing rather than about prices, the ease of someone entirely at home in an international setting.
That is precisely the art of good company in a place like this. What is called for is not a grand gesture but composure — a cultivated, well-travelled and multilingual escort companion who carries an evening at the Belles Rives as easily as a concert in the Pinède Gould or a late dinner over the water. As a placement agency, Ivana Models works exclusively with independent, self-employed escort models whose bearing matches that standard.
Travel escort companionship to Antibes and the Cap
Ivana Models has been established as an international escort service agency since 2017. For a destination like Cap d’Antibes, the focus is travel companionship: a companion who travels with you from Germany and shares the days on the Riviera — from the evening of arrival, along the coastal path, to a concert beneath the pines. Antibes is one of those international addresses beyond our fixed locations; for an overview of the places to which we arrange introductions, see our international cities.
The process is deliberately simple. You send an inquiry to our back-office, which proposes the escort ladies represented by our agency and coordinates the rendezvous — from the journey out to the details on the ground. Whether a dinner date in the old town or a hotel companionship for the whole stay, everything is arranged through the agency throughout. Our back-office is reachable daily from 09:00 to midnight, also via WhatsApp. The terms are set out on our fees page.
Cap d’Antibes asks for no grand entrance and rewards no haste. It is a place for those who understand that the real luxury lies in the understated — and for a stay in that register, a single inquiry is enough; the rest we coordinate with the confidentiality such an address invites.
Frequently asked questions
Cap d’Antibes is a pine-covered peninsula south of the town of Antibes, on the Côte d’Azur between Cannes and Nice. It is known for its Belle Époque villas, the Sentier du Littoral coastal path and the Hôtel du Cap-Eden-Roc.
Opened in 1870 as the Villa Soleil at the southern tip of the Cap, it belongs to the Oetker Collection and is regarded as one of the most exclusive hotels in the world. It is known for its sea-water pool carved from the rock and for a discretion once valued by the Duke and Duchess of Windsor.
The 2026 edition of Jazz à Juan runs from 9 to 19 July in the Pinède Gould of Juan-les-Pins. Founded in 1960, it is one of the oldest open-air jazz festivals in Europe.
Yes. The museum in the Château Grimaldi was Picasso’s studio in 1946; he left the town 23 paintings and 44 drawings. In 1966 it became the first museum ever devoted to the artist. The terrace and the sea view make the visit memorable.
A short inquiry by e-mail, telephone, contact form or WhatsApp is enough. Our back-office proposes suitable escort companions represented by our agency and coordinates the rendezvous. We are reachable daily from 09:00 to midnight.














