Berthe sylva biography examples
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Carolyn Burke the prize-winning biographer of Lee Miller turns her attention to the diminutive 20th century French icon and her enduring impact on French society.
TG: A proper, non-hagiographic biography requires years of meticulous research and then writing and rewriting-in effect you have an intimate relationship with your subject. Why Piaf and what was the most surprising thing you learned about her?
CB: Her songs have been with me since I was a nineteen-year old studying French and living in a maid’s room on the Left Bank. I learned French by singing along with Piaf at a time when some of her great, late songs kept morale high in spite of the bombs exploding in public places: the Algerian War had already come to France big time. While my teacher at the Sorbonne praised Piaf’s diction, I absorbed her defiant spirit along with a set of emotions I had not yet experienced, as if French culture had entered me by means of her music.
The most surprising
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Lucienne Delyle
French singer (–)
Lucienne Delyle (16 April – 10 April ) was a French singer.
After the success of Mon amant de Saint-Jean (my lover from Saint-Jean), in , Lucienne Delyle became one of the most popular French kvinnlig singers of the s.
Biography
[edit]Born in Paris, she received a pharmacist's education. She performed as an amateur singer until when Jacques Canetti, the artistic director of Radio Cité, heard her and immediately engaged her. In , she married the jazzman Aimé Barelli (–), who guided her career for the rest of her life. They had a daughter, Minouche Barelli (–). She had an immense success with the song "Mon amant de Saint-Jean" (My Lover From Saint-Jean) in , and became the most popular hona singer in France. She achieved her greatest popularity during the s. In , Bruno Coquatrix invited her and Gilbert Bécaud to headline the gala opening concert at the Paris Olympia. Toward the end of the s she suffered from leukemia and her career
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René de Buxeuil
René de Buxeuil | |
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Buxeuil's bust at Père Lachaise cemetery | |
Born | Jean-Baptiste Chevrier 4 June Buxeuil (Vienne department) |
Died | 29 June () (aged78) Paris |
Occupation(s) | Composer Chansonnier Music publisher |
René de Buxeuil (French pronunciation:[ʁənedəbyksœj]), pseudonym for Jean-Baptiste Chevrier (French pronunciation:[ʒɑ̃batistʃəvʁije]; 4 June – 29 July ), was a 20th-century French composer and chansonnier.
Biography
[edit]De Buxeuil's parents ran the bistroLes prévoyants de l'avenir in La Haye-Descartes. In a comrade accidentally shot a pellet rifle. He received the discharge in the eye. Blinded, he was placed in the Institut National des Jeunes Aveugles in Paris, where he was taught music. He won first prize for harmony, piano and clarinet. He began writing songs which he played for school holidays or in the cafe of his parents.
A young man, De Buxeuil attended le Bijou-Concert and met Montmartre ch