Suzanne Gabriello
Suzanne Gabriello , pseudonym of Suzanne Galopet (born January 24, 1932 in Paris , † August 9, 1992 in Paris), was a French singer and actress .
Life
Suzanne Gabriello, called Zizou , was the daughter of the French actor and comedian André Gabriello (actually André Galopet), whom she followed into show business. In 1955 she was a presenter , storyteller and singer alike and formed the trio Les Filles à Papa with two other daughters of famous cabaret artists, Françoise Dorin and Pierrette Souplex .
On a tour organized by Jacques Canetti she met the Belgian chansonnier Jacques Brel , with whom, although he was already married, she had a passionate love affair with numerous separations and reconciliations over the next five years. In her role as the announcer of the Paris Olympia , she campaigned for Brel's performance in the Music Hall and announced it herself at one of his early concerts. According to her, Brel wrote his famous chanson Ne me quitte pas for her and sang it for her in the presence of friends. Brel later contradicted this, however, and called the chanson simply “the story of an asshole and failure. It has nothing to do with any woman. "
Gabriello specialized in comic chansons and parodies . She parodied Georges Brassens , Enrico Macias , Jean Ferrat , Guy Mardel and Nino Ferrer, among others . She later switched to acting and starred in eight feature films. She married twice: she had a daughter with the director Guy Lauzin and a son and a daughter with the singer Michel Dubaile.
Filmography
- movie theater
- 1949: On ne triche pas avec la vie by René Delacroix and Paul Vandenberghe
- 1950: Foil douce by Jean-Paul Paulin
- 1950: La Rue sans loi by Marcel Gibaud
- 1952: Des quintuplés au pensionnat by René Jayet
- 1962: Du mouron pour les petits oiseaux by Marcel Carné
- 1964: Un gosse de la butte ( Rue des Cascades ) by Maurice Delbez
- TV
- 1974: Les Faucheurs de marguerites (German: Die Grashüpfer ) by Marcel Camus
- 1978: Le Temps des as by Claude Boissol
Web links
- Suzanne Gabriello in the Internet Movie Database (English)
- Suzanne Gabriello, la chanteuse parodique pour qui Brel a écrit “Ne me quitte pas” . In La Voix du Nord on August 15, 2009 (French)
- Suzanne Gabriello at cinememorial.com.
Individual evidence
- ↑ Olivier Todd: Jacques Brel - a life . Achilla-Presse, Hamburg 1997, ISBN 3-928398-23-7 , pp. 127-136.
- ↑ Suzanne Gabriello, la chanteuse parodique pour qui Brel a écrit “Ne me quitte pas” . In La Voix du Nord on August 15, 2009.
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Gabriello, Suzanne |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Galopet, Suzanne (real name) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | French singer and actress |
DATE OF BIRTH | January 24, 1932 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Paris |
DATE OF DEATH | August 9, 1992 |
Place of death | Paris |