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LEGENDS Edith Piaf, The Immortal, Cont'd. embarked on her first
American tour in late 1947, and at first met with little success;
audiences expecting a bright, gaudy Parisian spectacle were disappointed
with her simple presentation and downcast songs. Just as she was about to
leave the country, a prominent New York critic wrote a glowing review of
her show, urging audiences not to dismiss her out of hand; she was booked
at the Café Versailles in New York, and thanks to the publicity, she was a
hit, staying for over five months. In that time, she met up with French
boxer Marcel Cerdan, an acquaintance of about a year. In spite of Cerdan's
marriage, the two began a passionate affair, not long before Cerdan won
the world middleweight championship and became a French national hero.
Unfortunately, tragedy struck in October 1949, when Cerdan was planning to
visit
Piaf in New York; wanting him to arrive
sooner, she convinced him to take a plane instead of a boat. The plane
crashed in the Azores, killing him. Devastated by guilt and grief,
Piaf sank into drug and alcohol abuse,
and began to experiment with morphine. In early 1950, she recorded "L'Hymne
à l'Amour," a tribute to the one lover
Piaf would never quite get over;
co-written with
Marguerite Monnot, it
became one of her best-known and most heartfelt songs. In 1951,
Piaf met the young singer/songwriter
Charles Aznavour, a future giant of
French song who became her next protégé; unlike her others, this
relationship always remained strictly platonic, despite the enduring
closeness and loyalty of their friendship.
Aznavour served as a jack-of-all-trades
for
Piaf -- secretary, chauffeur, etc. -- and
she helped him get bookings, brought him on tour, and recorded several of
his early songs, including the hit "Plus Bleu Que Tes Yeux" and "Jézébel."
Their friendship nearly came to an early end when both were involved in a
serious car accident (as passengers);
Piaf suffered a broken arm and two broken
ribs. With her doctor prescribing morphine for pain relief, she soon
developed a serious chemical dependency to go with her increasing alcohol
problems. In 1952, she romanced and married singer
Jacques Pills, who co-wrote her hit "Je
T'ai Dans la Peau" with his pianist,
Gilbert Bécaud;
Bécaud would soon go on to become yet
another of the pop stars launched into orbit with
Piaf's assistance. Meanwhile,
Pills soon discovered the gravity of
Piaf's substance abuse problems, and
forced her into a detox clinic on three separate occasions. Nonetheless,
Piaf continued to record and perform with
great success, including appearances at Carnegie Hall and Paris' legendary
Olympia theater. She and
Pills divorced in 1955; not long
afterward, she suffered an attack of delirium tremens and had to be
hospitalized. As an interpretive singer,
Piaf was at the height of her powers
during the mid-'50s, even in spite of all her health woes. Her
international tours were consistently successful, and the devotion of her
massive French following verged on worship. She scored several more hits
over 1956-1958, among them "La Foule," "Les Amants D'un Jour," "L'homme à
la Moto," and the smash "Mon Manège à Moi." During that period, she also
completed another stay in detox; this time would prove to be successful,
but years of drug and alcohol abuse had already destabilized her health.
In late 1958, she met another up-and-coming songwriter,
Georges Moustaki, and made him her latest
lover and improvement project. Teaming once again with
Marguerite Monnot,
Moustaki co-wrote "Milord," an enormous
hit that topped the charts all over Europe in early 1959 and became
Piaf's first successful single in the
U.K. Later that year, she and
Moustaki were involved in another car
accident, in which her face was badly cut; in early 1960, while performing
at the Waldorf Astoria in New York, she collapsed and began to vomit blood
on stage, and was rushed to the hospital for emergency stomach surgery.
Stubbornly, she continued her tour, and collapsed on-stage again in
Stockholm; this time she was sent back to Paris for more surgery. |
Piaf was soon back in the recording studio, eager to record a composition by the legendary French songwriter Charles Dumont. "Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien" became one of her all-time classics and a huge international hit in 1960, serving as something of an equivalent to Frank Sinatra's "My Way." Piaf went on to score further hits with more Dumont songs, including "Mon Dieu," "Les Flons-Flons du Bal," and "Les Mots D'Amour." She staged a lengthy run at the Olympia in 1961, and later that year met an aspiring Greek singer named Théo Sarapo (born Theophanis Lamboukis), who became her latest project and, eventually, second husband. Sarapo was half her age, and given Piaf's poor health, the French media derided him as a gold digger. Nonetheless, they cut the duet "À Quoi Ça Sert l'Amour" in 1962, and performed together during Piaf's final engagement at the Olympia that year.
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