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Edith Piaf
1915 - 1963

Edith
Piaf was born Edith Giovanna Gassion in Belleville, Paris, and
was named after the World War I British nurse Edith Cavell, who
was executed for helping French soldiers escape from German
captivity. Her mother, Annetta Giovanna Maillard, worked as a
cafe singer under the name, Line Marsa, and her father,
Louis-Alphonse Gassion, was a Norman street acrobat. Before her
father enlisted with the French Army in 1916 to fight in WWI, he
took to her his mother, who ran a Normandy brothel. It was here
that Piaf learned how to live on the streets.
She began her public singing career in 1929 when, at age
fourteen, she joined her father in his acrobatic street
performances. Over the next six years, Piaf lived a rough life
on the streets. She married, had a child who died at age two
from mengingitis, and was involved with a pimp who forced her to
sing rather than become involved with prostitution. But, in
1935, nightclub owner Louis Leplee discovered her and persuaded
her to sing in his club. Her short stature (four foot, ten
inches) and her nervousness inspired Leplee to apply a nickname,
"La Môme Piaff," or the 'little sparrow.' Just one year after
Leplee took her under his wing, he was murdered. Piaf was
questioned and accused of being an accessory. She was acquitted
one it had been realized that he was murdered by mobsters who
had previous ties to Piaf. To overcome negative press about this
affair, Piaf hired - and became romantically involved with -
Raymond Asso. He changed her name to Edith Piaf, isolated her
from her previous acquaintances, and commissioned Monnot to
write songs that allueded to Piaf's previous street life.
By 1940, after her successful appearance in Jean Cocteau's
one-act play, Le Bel Indifferent, she began to rub shoulders
with people such as Maurice Chevalier and Jacques Borgeat. She
began to write her own lyrics and, in 1944, she brought Yves
Montand into her act. After 1942, at the end of WWII, Piaf began
to tour internationally, making appearances on the Ed Sullivan
Show and at Carnegie Hall.
Although Piaf had many lovers, the love of her life was the
married boxer, Marcel Cerdan. He died in a plane crash in
October 1949 as he attempted to travel from Paris to New York to
meet Piaf. Three years later, Piaf married Jacques Pills, a
singe, and Marlene Deitrich served as her maid of honor. They
divorced in 1956, and in 1962 Piaf married Theo Sarapo (Theophanis
Lamboukas), a Greek hairdresser-turned-singer and actor who was
20 years her junior.
Between 1951 and her death in 1963, Piaf was involved in three
near-fatal car accidents. She became addicted to morphine and
alcohol, and died of liver cancer at Plascassier, on the French
Riviera, on October 10, 1963. Although the Roman Catholic
archbishop denied her a funeral mass, based upon her lifestyle,
her funeral procession was so large that it was the first time
Parisian traffic came to a complete halt since the end of WWII.
She is buried in Pere Lachaise Cemetery, in Paris.
La Vie En Rose, a film about her life directed by Olivier Dahan,
debuted at the Berlin Film Festival in February 2007. Titled La
Mome in France, the film stars Marion Cotillard in the role that
won her the Academy Award for Best Actress (Oscar), as Piaf.
Dahan's film follows Piaf's life from early childhood to her
death in 1963. David Bret's definitive biography, Piaf, A
Passionate Life, was re-released by JR Books to coincide with
the film's release. Her love story with Cerdan was also depicted
on the big screen by Claude Lelouch in the movie Edith et Marcel
(1983) with Marcel Cerdan Jr. in the role of his father and
Evelyne Bouix portraying Piaf.
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Edith Giovanna Gassion, known as Edith Piaf (1915-1963), was a
French music hall/cabaret singer whose specialty was the love
ballad.
Edith Gassion was born in Belleville, a congested working-class
neighborhood of Paris, on December 19, 1915. Her mother, Anetta
Maillard (Gassion), was a café singer who went by the name Line
Marsa. Of Algerian circus descent, she was a habitual drifter.
Edith's father, Louis Alphonse Gassion, was from Normandy, a
slim, five-foot-tall circus acrobat who worked in the Paris
streets when he was not on tour in provincial France. He had
three theatrical sisters, one of whom, Edith's Tante (Aunt) Zaza,
performed in tightrope acts.
Louis was also a drifter, but he loved Edith and took care of
her, in his own way, when he could. In contrast, Edith's mother
casually abandoned the girl in infancy. This child, Edith Piaf,
was to become an enormously popular singer of international
fame, noted for her generosity. Later she looked after her
father financially, but she could never bring herself to forgive
her mother.
Edith was reared initially by her maternal grandmother, Ména
(Emma Said ben Mohamed), who had managed a circus
performing-flea show. Tante Zaza rescued lice-infested Edith
from Ména's filthy hovel in Paris. Zaza took the child (aged
about seven) to the care of her paternal grandmother, a cook in
a local brothel (a maison closé) in Bernay, a village in
Normandy.
An incident of "blindness" in Piaf's early childhood was
apparently conjunctivitis; her "miraculous" cure at the shrine
of St. Teresa at Lisieux was probably after the disease had
vanished. The prayers of the young ladies of the Bernay brothel
may have had nothing to do with the cure, but Piaf said:
"Miracle or not, I am forever grateful."
Early in the 1920s (about 1923) Edith Gassion left Bernay and
went on a life of circus travels in Belgium and northern France,
living in a caravan with her father and his various amours, who
acted as mothers. Acrobatics had not interested Edith, but she
sang. As the decade closed, Louis managed to acquire a
22-year-old common-law wife, Yéyette. In March 1931 Yéyette had
a child, Denise, in Belleville, Paris, where all three of them
had gone to live. Edith resolved to leave. She met Simone
Berteaut, who was a companion throughout many adventures and was
an "evil presence" sometimes. In the early 1930s they went
around together in the economically depressed city, working at
odd jobs and begging. Edith frequently sang as a chanteur des
rues (streetsinger). The French urban working class was fairly
small, compared with Britain, Germany, or the United States;
there was not much for penniless French women to do-dressmaking,
hairdressing … or prostitution.
The Naming of Edith Piaf
In 1931 Edith fell in love with Louis Dupont, an errand boy whom
she called "P'tit Louis." They lived in a room at the Hotel de
l'Avenir, rue Orfila. In February 1933 Edith, who was barely 18,
gave birth to a daughter, Marcelle. Soon after, she left P'tit
Louis for a soldier of the French Foreign Legion. She sang at
small bars and clubs in Montmartre and Pigalle (the famed
entertainment district), meeting the demimonde of Paris and all
sorts of people-talented crossdressers, lesbians and
homosexuals, musicians, theatrical agents, poets, and composers.
Singing at a bal musette in Pigalle early in 1935, she heard
from P'tit Louis that her daughter had meningitis; Marcelle died
in eight days later. To pay funeral costs, Edith, it was said,
had to prostitute herself.
In October 1935 Edith met Louis Leplée, a former Montmartre drag
artist who had opened a sophisticated dinner club, Gerny's, in
the smarter Champs-Elysees area. Leplée heard Edith singing the
popular song Comme un moineau ("like a sparrow") in the street.
Leplée called her "La Môme Piaf" ("The Kid Sparrow"). Ten new
songs were selected for her by Leplée; he made her wear a simple
black skirt and pullover and no makeup, as he had first seen her
singing in the streets. Amid long applause, Maurice Chevalier
said "She has got what it takes!" The singer Edith Piaf was
born.
Six months later local gangsters murdered Leplée. Piaf then met
Raymond Asso, a writer who made her a "star" and went to live
with Asso at the Hôtel Piccadilly in Pigalle. Piaf called him "mon
poète." Asso trained her in everything-vocal instruction,
gestures, how to spell and write, what she should read, even
eating manners and hygiene. Piaf said "He taught me what a song
really is." As a result, at the age of 20 she made her début at
a large Paris vaudeville theatre and was a hit.
Later other composers and writers amplified Piaf's repertoire
with typical Piaf "blues" ballads. On stage Piaf had superb
technical skills. Her songs had dramatic fire, tragedy, and
anguish. She had much the same build as her father - two inches
under five feet tall and some 90 pounds in weight. But she
possessed the voice to bewitch audiences - throaty, throbbing
yet tender. ("Who is that plain little woman, with a voice too
big for her body?" asked Mistinguett, herself an aging star,
slightly jealous.) Tossed auburn hair, big eyes, pale, mournful
face, Piaf seemed a waif, a castaway on the stage of life,
troubled by everything that she witnessed. There was a special
Piaf stance, arms-outstretched, fingers turned inwards,
calculated to have and hold the listener in a minor state of
doomed love, nostalgia, and regret.
In March 1937 Raymond Asso managed to obtain for Piaf a contract
at the Théâtre de I'ABC, complete with her little black dress
and starched white collar. She was a complete success, with
songs created by Asso. The next year, 1938, was a good year for
Piaf's career. Asso installed her in the Hôtel Alcina on the
Avenue Junot with a Chinese cook and a secretary. But Piaf and
Asso were quarreling, Simone Berteaut was back, and Piaf was
sleeping with other men. In September 1939 World War II broke
out in Europe and Asso was called into the French Army. Piaf met
another lover, actor Paul Meurisse.
Piaf had first sung on radio in 1936 and had a first hit record
in 1937, Mon Légionnaire (words by Asso/music by Monnot), with a
bugle-call flourish. She herself wrote some thirty songs and
performed about two hundred others in her life. La vie en rose
was famous all over the world. Jean Cocteau wrote a play for
her, Le Bel Indifférent, which was staged in Paris in 1940 at
Les Bouffes-Parisiens theater. Among films was
Montmartre-sur-Seine (1941), made during World War II. During
the war Piaf remained mainly in Paris, miserably, along with
Jean Cocteau.
Becomes an International Star
In the postwar period of European reconstruction and economic
boom after 1945, Piaf became an international star, with ten
tours to the United States. She made her first trip to New York
in October 1947, accompanied by a male nonet, Les Compagnons de
la Chanson; they made a lighthearted film together, Neuf Garcons
- Un Coeur (1947). The nine young Frenchmen were an example of
Piaf's professional generosity - she always sought new talent,
both as entertainers and/or as lovers. Eddie Constantine,
Charles Aznavour, and Yves Montand are some singers she coached.
Piaf said "You have to send the elevator back down, so that
others may get to the top." Even though her standard fee (in the
1950s) was $1, 000 a night, her finances were always a problem.
She gave as much as she took.
Piaf was much in love with the world middleweight boxing
champion Marcel Cerdan for two years; he was killed in an air
crash in 1949. She was awaiting his plane in New York. Piaf had
a bent toward mysticism all along, and Cerdan's death led her to
talk to him on the "other side." Nevertheless, she married
Jacques Pills (a singer) in 1952 and divorced him in 1957. At
the end of her life (1962) she married a 27-year-old singer,
Théo Sarapo.
Her death on October 11, 1963 at the age of 47 was due to a
liver ailment and internal hemorrhage caused by a life of drink,
drug dependency, accidents, and wear-and-tear. Jean Cocteau died
seven hours after hearing of his friend's death, at age 74. Non,
je ne regrette rien ("No, I do not regret anything"), her song
of 1960, was a fitting tribute.
A year earlier at a comeback at Paris' Olympia Music Hall, Piaf
had tottered on stage, barely able to walk, her hands twisted by
arthritis; but she sold a million copies, in France alone, of a
recording of that event-Live at the Olympia. Piaf was buried in
the famous Père Lachaise Cemetery, along with Colette, Sarah
Bernhardt, Oscar Wilde, Chopin, and Balzac. Over 100, 000 people
came to see her bier at her Paris flat, and 40, 000 went to the
cemetery.
Piaf was the darling of the French people. She sang almost
totally in the French language, very often in Parisian slang, in
a voice that was somewhat metallic, loud, and direct. Her
gestures were in pantomime, echoing the sufferings of daily
existence, working-class scenes of factories, chimney blocks,
and mean streets, trains slowly speeding up out of Paris
railroad stations taking their passengers away from true love.
"I have given my tears, paid so many tears for the right love, "
she said.
Noel Coward, the English satirist and playwright, wrote in his
1956 diary "Piaf in her dusty black dress is still singing sad
songs about bereft tarts longing for their lovers to come back …
but I do wish she would pop in a couple of cheerful songs just
for the hell of it." Like Billie Holiday, Judy Garland, Janis
Joplin, and numerous other singers, Piaf was bent on
self-destruction. She needed suffering. At the end of her life
she faced death with equanimity. Piaf said in Ma Vie:
Peut m'arriver n'importe quoi
J'm'en fous pas mal …
J'etais heureuse, et prête.
(No matter what happens
I couldn't care less … .
I am happy, and ready)
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This web page was last updated on:
15 December, 2008
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