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Claude François

Claude Antoine Marie François (French pronunciation: ​[klod ɑ̃twan maʁi fʁɑ̃swa]; 1 February 1939 – 11 March 1978), also known by the nickname Cloclo, was a French pop singer, composer, songwriter, record producer, drummer and dancer. François co-wrote the lyrics of "Comme d'habitude" (composed by Jacques Revaux), the original version of "My Way" and composed the music of "Parce que je t'aime mon enfant", the original version of "My Boy". Among his other famous songs are "Le Téléphone Pleure", "Le lundi au soleil", "Magnolias for Ever" and "Alexandrie Alexandra". He also enjoyed considerable success with French-language versions of English-language songs, including "Belles! Belles! Belles!" (The Everly Brothers' "Made to Love"), "Cette année là" ("December, 1963 (Oh, What a Night)") and "Je vais à Rio" ("I Go to Rio").

Claude François
François in 1965
Background information
Birth nameClaude Antoine Marie François
Also known asCloclo
Born(1939-02-01)1 February 1939
Ismailia, Kingdom of Egypt
Died11 March 1978(1978-03-11) (aged 39)
Paris, France
GenresPop
Occupation(s)Musician, singer, songwriter, record producer, editor-in-chief
Instrument(s)Vocals, violin, percussion and drums
Years active1962–1978
LabelsFontana, Phillips, Flèche, Phonogram
Websitehttp://www.claudefrancois.fr

François sold some 35 million records during his career (and after his death) and was about to embark for the United States when he was accidentally electrocuted in March 1978 at age 39.[1] Former French President Valéry Giscard d'Estaing is quoted as saying Claude François was, to him, "the French equivalent of The Beatles, meaning the great talent of a generation".[2][3]

Early life

The son of a French father and a Calabrian mother, Claude Antoine Marie François was born in Egypt, in the city of Ismaïlia, where his father, Aimé François (1908–1961), was working as a senior manager in the Anglo-French Suez canal company on the Suez Canal. In 1951, the job took the family to the city of Port Tewfik (now Suez Port). Claude had an older sister, Josette (born 1934), who wrote her memoirs in 2008.

François' mother, Lucia Mazzeï (1910–1992) was very musical and had her son take piano and violin lessons. On his own, the boy learned to play the drums. As a result of the 1956 Suez Crisis, the family returned to live in Monaco, The family's expulsion from Egypt was traumatic. They struggled financially after François' father fell ill and could not work. Claude found a job as a bank clerk and at night earned extra money playing drums with an orchestra at the luxury hotels along the French Riviera. With a good singing voice, he was offered a chance to sing at a hotel in the fashionable Mediterranean resort town of Juan-les-Pins. Claude's show was well-received and he began to perform at the glamorous night-clubs along the Côte d'Azur. While working in a club in 1959, he met Janet Woollacott; they wed in 1960. Claude's father turned his back on his son when he became a musician in Monte Carlo in 1957.[why?]

Professional career and personal life

 
François on stage

François moved to Paris, where there were many more opportunities to pursue his career. At the time, American rock and roll was taking hold in France and he took a job as part of a singing group to make a living. With the goal of eventually making it as a solo act, he paid the cost to record a 45rpm. Trying to capitalise on the American dance craze "The Twist", he recorded a song titled "Nabout Twist" that proved a resounding failure. Undaunted, in 1962 he recorded a cover version in French of an Everly Brothers song, "Made to Love", aka "Girls, Girls, Girls", under the name "Belles! Belles! Belles!".

François' career continued to blossom under a new manager. In 1963 he followed the first success with another French adaptation of an American song, this time recording "If I Had a Hammer" and "Walk Right In" in French as "Si j'avais un marteau" and "Marche Tout Droit". François met Michel Bourdais who was working for the well-known French magazine Salut les Copains ("Hi Buddies") and he asked him to draw his portrait.[4]

 
At the mill of Dannemois, the famous portrait of Claude François, drawn in 1963 by Michel Bourdais at Claude's request.

On 5 April 1963,[5] he headlined at the Paris Olympia, a sign that he had arrived. In 1964, he groomed 17-year-old Eurovision-winning singer, France Gall.[citation needed] At the end of that year, François created original new dance steps, and Michel Bourdais drew them. For the first time, they brought up the idea of setting up a show with female dancers.[4]

In 1967, he and Jacques Revaux wrote and composed a song in French called "Comme d'habitude" ("As Usual"), which became a hit in Francophone countries. Canadian singing star Paul Anka reworked it for the English-speaking public into the now legendary hit most famously sung by Frank Sinatra as "My Way". He sang the original version of "Parce que je t'aime, mon enfant" ("Because I Love You My Child") in 1971; it remained relatively little-known in France but Elvis Presley covered it under the title "My Boy".[citation needed]

Although François continued his successful formula of adapting English and American rock and roll hits for the French market, by the 1970s the market had changed and the disco craze that swept North America took root in France. This was no problem for the versatile François; he simply re-invented himself as the king of French disco, recording "La plus belle chose du monde", a French version of the Bee Gees' hit record, "Massachusetts".[citation needed]

 
Claude François performing in 1976

Looking for new talent, he came across a singing family of two sisters and their cousins. These women became known as "Les Flêchettes" (named after "Flèche", the production label he owned) and then "Les Clodettes". He produced a couple of albums for them before his death, and they went on to sing for some of the major stars in European music. He worked non-stop, touring across Europe, Africa and at major venues in Quebec in Canada.[citation needed]

However, in 1971, his workload caught up with him when he collapsed on stage from exhaustion. After a brief period off, he returned to the recording studios, releasing several best-selling hits throughout the early 1970s. He expanded from owning his own record company to acquiring a celebrity magazine and a modelling agency.[citation needed]

Philanthropy

Although driven to achieve financial success, in 1974 he organised a concert to raise funds for a charity for handicapped children, and the following year he participated in a Paris concert to raise funds for medical research.

Personal life

In November 1960, he married with Janet Wollacoot. She had left him in 1962, and he was finally divorced from her in 1967. This failed marriage was one of the three big traumas that affected his whole life. The relationship with France Gall ended in July 1967. After this, François had an affair with singer Annie Phillippe, who reportedly refused to marry him.

François soon got consolation when he arranged a date with model Isabelle Forêt, whom he had first met a few years before. Their relationship lasted from 1967 to 1972 and produced two sons, Claude Jr. in July 1968 and Marc in November 1969. He hid the existence of his second son for five years because he thought that being a father of two would destroy his boyish image as "a free man and seducer".

By 1972 he was single again, dating several well-known European stars. Finnish model Sofia Kiukkonen 1973–76 and American model Kathalyn (Kathleen) H. Jones-Mann 1976–78 were his most important relationships of this period. He also had an affair with his dresser Sylvie Mathurin from 1974 to 1978.

He continued to perform while overseeing his numerous business interests. In 1975, while in London, he narrowly escaped death when an IRA bomb exploded in the lobby of the Hilton hotel and two years later a fan tried to shoot him while he drove his car.[6]

In 1977–78, more than 15 years after his first hit record, he was still topping the musical charts with multi-million sales from hits such as "Alexandrie Alexandra" (which was released on the day of his burial) and performing to large audiences.

International career

He performed an international career mostly in Belgium and Switzerland, but also in Italy, Spain, England and Canada. In 1976, his song "Le Telephone Pleure" ("Tears on the Telephone") reached No. 35 in the UK Singles Chart.[7] On 16 January 1978, he performed, for the first time for a French singer, a gala at the Royal Albert Hall in London to an audience of 6000.

Death

 
Claude François burial site in Dannemois, Essonne, south of Paris

After working in Switzerland on 9 and 10 March and recording a television special for the BBC on Saturday, 11 March 1978, François returned to his Paris apartment, 46 Boulevard Exelmans, to appear, the next day, on Les Rendez-vous du Dimanche with TV host Michel Drucker. While taking a bath, he noticed that the light fixture was not straight on the wall; he stood up, tried to straighten it and was electrocuted.[8]

His body was buried in the village of Dannemois, in the Essonne department (about 55 km (34 mi) south of Paris), near which Claude François owned a house where he spent his weekends.

Legacy

On 11 March 2000, the 22nd anniversary of his death, Place Claude-François in Paris was named in his memory; it is located right in front of the building where he died.

The 2003 jukebox musical Belles belles belles is based on François' songs.[9]

A biographical film called Cloclo (My Way internationally) was released in March 2012 to coincide with the anniversary of his death. It runs two and a half hours long and stars Jérémie Renier.

Claude François's sons, Claude Jr and Marc, have assumed the management of their father's artistic heritage over the years.

Controversies

A woman named Julie Bocquet maintains that François is her father.[10] Fabienne, her mother, was 15 when she got pregnant.[11] Others have recently come forward as well.[12]

Discography

Albums

  • 2012: Génération Cloclo
  • 2012: 30 ans – Édition aniversaire (Compilation album)

Singles

  • "Nabout Twist" (Claude François)
  • "Belles! Belles! Belles!" ("Made to Love", Phil Everly/Claude François/Vline Buggy)
  • "Vénus en blue-jeans" ("Venus in Blue Jeans")[13]
  • "Pauvre petite fille riche" (Hubert Giraud/Claude François/Vline Buggy)
  • "Si j'avais un marteau" ("If I Had a Hammer", Lee Hays/Pete Seeger/Claude François/Vline Buggy)
  • "J'y pense et puis j'oublie" ("It Comes and Goes", Bill Anderson/Claude François)
  • "Donna Donna" ("Dona, Dona", Sholom Secunda/Claude François/Vline Buggy)
  • "Je sais" (Claude François/Gérard Gustin/Vline Buggy)
  • "Quand un bateau passe" ("Trains and Boats and Planes", Burt Bacharach/Hal David/Claude François/Vline Buggy)
  • "Même si tu revenais" (Bernard Kesslair/Claude François/Jacques Chaumelle)
  • "Mais combien de temps" (Claude François/Vline Buggy)
  • "Reviens-moi vite" (Claude François)
  • "J'attendrai" ("Reach Out I'll Be There", Holland–Dozier–Holland/Claude François/Vline Buggy)
  • "Mais quand le matin" (Eric Charden/Claude François/Gilles Thibaut)
  • "Comme d'habitude" (Jacques Revaux/Claude François/Gilles Thibaut)
  • "Pardon" (Jean Renard/Claude François/Gilles Thibaut)
  • "Aussi loin" (Reg Guest/Claude François/Gilles Thibaut)
  • "Avec la tête, Avec le cœur" (Claude François/Jean-Pierre Bourtayre/Yves Dessca/Vline Buggy)
  • "Reste" ("Beggin'", Bob Gaudio/Peggy Farina/Jacques Plante)
  • "Dans les orphelinats" (Claude François/Gilles Thibaut)
  • "Un monde de musique" (Claude François/Ralph Bernet)
  • "Une petite fille aux yeux rouges" (Jean-Pierre Bourtayre/Claude François/Vline Buggy)
  • "Un jour ou l'autre" (Claude François/Jacques Plante)
  • "Cherche" ("Show Me", Joe Tex/Claude François)
  • "Mon cœur est une maison vide" (Claude François/Jean-Pierre Bourtayre/Yves Dessca/Vline Buggy)
  • "Tout éclate tout explose" ("Love Explosions", George Harrison/George Kerr/Jacques Plante)
  • "C'est de l'eau, c'est du vent" (Alice Dona/Pierre Delanoë)
  • "Le monde est grand, les gens sont beaux" ("Beautiful World, Beautiful People", Jimmy Cliff/Eddy Marnay)
  • "Si douce à mon souvenir" ("Gentle on My Mind", John Hartford/Claude François/Colette Rivat)
  • "Parce que je t'aime mon enfant" (Claude François/Jean-Pierre Bourtayre/Yves Dessca)
  • "C'est la même chanson" ("It's the Same Old Song", Holland–Dozier–Holland/Claude François/Colette Rivat)
  • "Et pourtant le temps passe" (Claude François/Paul Sebastian/Lana Sebastian/Michaële)
  • "Je vais mieux" (Claude François)
  • "Bye bye petite Julie" (Claude François)
  • "Plus rien qu'une adresse en commun" (Alain Chamfort/Yves Dessca)
  • "Il fait beau, il fait bon" ("Freedom Come, Freedom Go", Roger Greenaway/Roger Cook/Eddy Marnay)
  • "Seule une romance" (Claude François/Eddy Marnay)
  • "Y'a le printemps qui chante (Viens à la maison)" (Claude François/Jean-Pierre Bourtayre/Jean-Michel Rivat/Frank Thomas)
  • "En attendant" (Claude François/Michèle Vendôme)
  • "Le Lundi au soleil" (Patrick Juvet/Jean-Michel Rivat/Frank Thomas)
  • "Belinda" ("Miss Belinda", Des Parton/Eddy Marnay)
  • "Je viens dîner ce soir" (Paul Sebastian/Lana Sebastian/Michaële)
  • "Je t'embrasse" (Claude François/Jean-Pierre Bourtayre/Yves Dessca/Jean-Michel Rivat)
  • "À part ça la vie est belle" ("By the Devil I Was Tempted", Doug Flett/Guy Fletcher/ Eddy Marnay)
  • "Sha la la (Hier est près de moi)" ("Yesterday Once More", Richard Carpenter/Eddy Marnay)
  • "Chanson populaire" (Jean-Pierre Bourtayre/Nicolas Skorsky/Claude François)
  • "Le mal aimé" ("Daydreamer", Terry Dempsey/Eddy Marnay)
  • "La musique américaine" (Claude François/Jean-Pierre Bourtayre/Jean-Michel Rivat)
  • "Le téléphone pleure" (Claude François /Jean-Pierre Bourtayre/Frank Thomas)
  • "Toi et moi contre le monde entier" (Claude François/Jean-Pierre Bourtayre/Eddy Marnay)
  • "Soudain il ne reste qu'une chanson" ("I'll Be Around", Thom Bell/Philip Hurtt/Jean-Michel Rivat)
  • "Le chanteur malheureux" (Jean-Pierre Bourtayre/Martial Carceles/Jean-Michel Rivat/Michel Renard)
  • "Joue quelque chose de simple" (Claude François/Jean-Pierre Bourtayre/Jean-Michel Rivat)
  • "Le spectacle est terminé" (Claude François/Jean-Pierre Bourtayre/Eddy Marnay)
  • "Pourquoi pleurer (sur un succès d'été)" ("Please Mr. Please", Bruce Welch/John Rostill/Frank Thomas)
  • "17 ans" ("At Seventeen", Janis Ian/Frank Thomas)
  • "Une chanson française" (Claude François/Jean-Pierre Bourtayre/Nicolas Skorsky)
  • "Sale bonhomme" ("Nasty Dan", Jeff Moss/Eddy Marnay)
  • "Dors petit homme (La chèvre grise)" (Claude François/Eddy Marnay)
  • "Cette année-là" ("December, 1963 (Oh, What a Night)", Bob Gaudio/Eddy Marnay)
  • "La solitude c'est après" (André Popp/Gilbert Sinoué)
  • "Le vagabond" (Cyril Assous/Eddy Marnay)
  • "Danse ma vie" (Claude François /Jean-Pierre Bourtayre/Pierre Delanoë)
  • "Quelquefois" (duet with Martine Clemenceau) (Claude François/Jean-Pierre Bourtayre/Vline Buggy)
  • "Je vais à Rio" ("I Go to Rio", Peter Allen/Eddy Marnay)
  • "Les anges, les roses et la pluie" (Claude François/Jean-Pierre Bourtayre/Vline Buggy)
  • "Toi et le soleil" ("I Can See Clearly Now", Johnny Nash/Eddy Marnay)
  • "C'est comme ça que l'on s'est aimé" (Duet with Kathalyn Jones) (Claude François/Jean-Pierre Bourtayre/Vline Buggy)
  • "Écoute ma chanson" (Toto Cutugno/Claude François/Yves Dessca)
  • "Et je t'aime tellement" ("And I Love You So", Don McLean/Claude François)
  • "Magnolias for Ever" (Claude François /Jean-Pierre Bourtayre/Étienne Roda-Gil)
  • "Alexandrie Alexandra" (Claude François/Jean-Pierre Bourtayre/Etienne Roda-Gill)
  • "Bordeaux rosé (Eddy Pumer/Peter Daltrey)

English songs

  • "Go Where the Sun Is Brighter" ("Viens à la maison", English lyrics by Norman Newell)
  • "Monday Morning Again" ("Le lundi au soleil", English lyrics by Norman Newell)
  • "Love Will Call the Tune" ("Chanson populaire", English lyrics by Norman Newell)
  • "Hello Happiness" (original song by The Drifters, lyrics by Les Reed and Roger Greenaway)
  • "Tears on the Telephone" ("Le Téléphone Pleure")
  • "I Know" ("Je sais", English lyrics by Norman Newell)
  • "You Are" ("Une chanson française", English lyrics by Norman Newell)
  • "My Boy" ("Parce que je t'aime, mon enfant", English lyrics by Phil Coulter & Bill Martin)
  • "My World of Music" ("Un monde de musique", English lyrics by Norman Newell)
  • "Crying in His Heart" ("Avec le cœur, avec la tête", English lyrics by Norman Newell)
  • "My Way" ("Comme d'habitude", English lyrics by Paul Anka)
  • "I Believe in Father Christmas" (original song by Greg Lake)
  • "Stop, Stop, Stop"
  • "Keep on Driving"

References

  1. ^ French film festival City of Lights, City of Angels kicks off Monday, latimes.com, 3 February 2012.
  2. ^ France Remembers Claude François, TheArtsdesk.com, 13 February 2012
  3. ^ Pierre Pernez, Claude François en souvenirs, City Editions, 2013 (French)
  4. ^ a b Richard Anthony, Quand on choisit la liberté…, éditions Florent Massot, octobre 2010 (French)
  5. ^ . www.ClaudeFrancois-LeSite.fr. Archived from the original on 6 April 2012. Retrieved 22 October 2011.
  6. ^ "Bonhams : Mercedes-Benz 450 SEL 6.9 berline 1976". Bonhams.com.
  7. ^ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 212. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.
  8. ^ "Leading French Popular Singer, Claude Francois, in Home Mishap". The New York Times. 12 March 1978. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 1 December 2020.
  9. ^ . regardencoulisse.com (in French). 21 November 2003. Archived from the original on 9 December 2014. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  10. ^ "La fille cachée de Claude François se confie pour la première fois : Femme Actuelle Le MAG". Femmeactuelle.fr. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 18 September 2020. Retrieved 10 September 2019.
  12. ^ "Claude François: Julie Bocquet ne serait pas sa seule enfant cachée : Femme Actuelle Le MAG". Femmeactuelle.fr. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
  13. ^ "Claude François – Vénus en blue-jeans". Ultratop.

External links

  • Claude François discography at Discogs  
  • Claude François at IMDb

claude, françois, french, painter, recollect, franciscan, monk, painter, claude, antoine, marie, françois, french, pronunciation, klod, twan, maʁi, fʁɑ, february, 1939, march, 1978, also, known, nickname, cloclo, french, singer, composer, songwriter, record, p. For the French painter and Recollect Franciscan monk see Claude Francois painter Claude Antoine Marie Francois French pronunciation klod ɑ twan maʁi fʁɑ swa 1 February 1939 11 March 1978 also known by the nickname Cloclo was a French pop singer composer songwriter record producer drummer and dancer Francois co wrote the lyrics of Comme d habitude composed by Jacques Revaux the original version of My Way and composed the music of Parce que je t aime mon enfant the original version of My Boy Among his other famous songs are Le Telephone Pleure Le lundi au soleil Magnolias for Ever and Alexandrie Alexandra He also enjoyed considerable success with French language versions of English language songs including Belles Belles Belles The Everly Brothers Made to Love Cette annee la December 1963 Oh What a Night and Je vais a Rio I Go to Rio Claude FrancoisFrancois in 1965Background informationBirth nameClaude Antoine Marie FrancoisAlso known asClocloBorn 1939 02 01 1 February 1939Ismailia Kingdom of EgyptDied11 March 1978 1978 03 11 aged 39 Paris FranceGenresPopOccupation s Musician singer songwriter record producer editor in chiefInstrument s Vocals violin percussion and drumsYears active1962 1978LabelsFontana Phillips Fleche PhonogramWebsitehttp www claudefrancois fr Francois sold some 35 million records during his career and after his death and was about to embark for the United States when he was accidentally electrocuted in March 1978 at age 39 1 Former French President Valery Giscard d Estaing is quoted as saying Claude Francois was to him the French equivalent of The Beatles meaning the great talent of a generation 2 3 Contents 1 Early life 2 Professional career and personal life 3 Philanthropy 4 Personal life 4 1 International career 5 Death 6 Legacy 7 Controversies 8 Discography 8 1 Albums 8 2 Singles 8 3 English songs 9 References 10 External linksEarly life EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The son of a French father and a Calabrian mother Claude Antoine Marie Francois was born in Egypt in the city of Ismailia where his father Aime Francois 1908 1961 was working as a senior manager in the Anglo French Suez canal company on the Suez Canal In 1951 the job took the family to the city of Port Tewfik now Suez Port Claude had an older sister Josette born 1934 who wrote her memoirs in 2008 Francois mother Lucia Mazzei 1910 1992 was very musical and had her son take piano and violin lessons On his own the boy learned to play the drums As a result of the 1956 Suez Crisis the family returned to live in Monaco The family s expulsion from Egypt was traumatic They struggled financially after Francois father fell ill and could not work Claude found a job as a bank clerk and at night earned extra money playing drums with an orchestra at the luxury hotels along the French Riviera With a good singing voice he was offered a chance to sing at a hotel in the fashionable Mediterranean resort town of Juan les Pins Claude s show was well received and he began to perform at the glamorous night clubs along the Cote d Azur While working in a club in 1959 he met Janet Woollacott they wed in 1960 Claude s father turned his back on his son when he became a musician in Monte Carlo in 1957 why Professional career and personal life Edit Francois on stage Francois moved to Paris where there were many more opportunities to pursue his career At the time American rock and roll was taking hold in France and he took a job as part of a singing group to make a living With the goal of eventually making it as a solo act he paid the cost to record a 45rpm Trying to capitalise on the American dance craze The Twist he recorded a song titled Nabout Twist that proved a resounding failure Undaunted in 1962 he recorded a cover version in French of an Everly Brothers song Made to Love aka Girls Girls Girls under the name Belles Belles Belles Francois career continued to blossom under a new manager In 1963 he followed the first success with another French adaptation of an American song this time recording If I Had a Hammer and Walk Right In in French as Si j avais un marteau and Marche Tout Droit Francois met Michel Bourdais who was working for the well known French magazine Salut les Copains Hi Buddies and he asked him to draw his portrait 4 At the mill of Dannemois the famous portrait of Claude Francois drawn in 1963 by Michel Bourdais at Claude s request On 5 April 1963 5 he headlined at the Paris Olympia a sign that he had arrived In 1964 he groomed 17 year old Eurovision winning singer France Gall citation needed At the end of that year Francois created original new dance steps and Michel Bourdais drew them For the first time they brought up the idea of setting up a show with female dancers 4 In 1967 he and Jacques Revaux wrote and composed a song in French called Comme d habitude As Usual which became a hit in Francophone countries Canadian singing star Paul Anka reworked it for the English speaking public into the now legendary hit most famously sung by Frank Sinatra as My Way He sang the original version of Parce que je t aime mon enfant Because I Love You My Child in 1971 it remained relatively little known in France but Elvis Presley covered it under the title My Boy citation needed Although Francois continued his successful formula of adapting English and American rock and roll hits for the French market by the 1970s the market had changed and the disco craze that swept North America took root in France This was no problem for the versatile Francois he simply re invented himself as the king of French disco recording La plus belle chose du monde a French version of the Bee Gees hit record Massachusetts citation needed Claude Francois performing in 1976 Looking for new talent he came across a singing family of two sisters and their cousins These women became known as Les Flechettes named after Fleche the production label he owned and then Les Clodettes He produced a couple of albums for them before his death and they went on to sing for some of the major stars in European music He worked non stop touring across Europe Africa and at major venues in Quebec in Canada citation needed However in 1971 his workload caught up with him when he collapsed on stage from exhaustion After a brief period off he returned to the recording studios releasing several best selling hits throughout the early 1970s He expanded from owning his own record company to acquiring a celebrity magazine and a modelling agency citation needed Philanthropy EditAlthough driven to achieve financial success in 1974 he organised a concert to raise funds for a charity for handicapped children and the following year he participated in a Paris concert to raise funds for medical research Personal life EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message In November 1960 he married with Janet Wollacoot She had left him in 1962 and he was finally divorced from her in 1967 This failed marriage was one of the three big traumas that affected his whole life The relationship with France Gall ended in July 1967 After this Francois had an affair with singer Annie Phillippe who reportedly refused to marry him Francois soon got consolation when he arranged a date with model Isabelle Foret whom he had first met a few years before Their relationship lasted from 1967 to 1972 and produced two sons Claude Jr in July 1968 and Marc in November 1969 He hid the existence of his second son for five years because he thought that being a father of two would destroy his boyish image as a free man and seducer By 1972 he was single again dating several well known European stars Finnish model Sofia Kiukkonen 1973 76 and American model Kathalyn Kathleen H Jones Mann 1976 78 were his most important relationships of this period He also had an affair with his dresser Sylvie Mathurin from 1974 to 1978 He continued to perform while overseeing his numerous business interests In 1975 while in London he narrowly escaped death when an IRA bomb exploded in the lobby of the Hilton hotel and two years later a fan tried to shoot him while he drove his car 6 In 1977 78 more than 15 years after his first hit record he was still topping the musical charts with multi million sales from hits such as Alexandrie Alexandra which was released on the day of his burial and performing to large audiences International career Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message He performed an international career mostly in Belgium and Switzerland but also in Italy Spain England and Canada In 1976 his song Le Telephone Pleure Tears on the Telephone reached No 35 in the UK Singles Chart 7 On 16 January 1978 he performed for the first time for a French singer a gala at the Royal Albert Hall in London to an audience of 6000 Death Edit Claude Francois burial site in Dannemois Essonne south of Paris After working in Switzerland on 9 and 10 March and recording a television special for the BBC on Saturday 11 March 1978 Francois returned to his Paris apartment 46 Boulevard Exelmans to appear the next day on Les Rendez vous du Dimanche with TV host Michel Drucker While taking a bath he noticed that the light fixture was not straight on the wall he stood up tried to straighten it and was electrocuted 8 His body was buried in the village of Dannemois in the Essonne department about 55 km 34 mi south of Paris near which Claude Francois owned a house where he spent his weekends Legacy EditOn 11 March 2000 the 22nd anniversary of his death Place Claude Francois in Paris was named in his memory it is located right in front of the building where he died The 2003 jukebox musical Belles belles belles is based on Francois songs 9 A biographical film called Cloclo My Way internationally was released in March 2012 to coincide with the anniversary of his death It runs two and a half hours long and stars Jeremie Renier Claude Francois s sons Claude Jr and Marc have assumed the management of their father s artistic heritage over the years Controversies EditA woman named Julie Bocquet maintains that Francois is her father 10 Fabienne her mother was 15 when she got pregnant 11 Others have recently come forward as well 12 Discography EditAlbums Edit This section needs expansion with comprehensive list of albums You can help by adding to it March 2012 2012 Generation Cloclo 2012 30 ans Edition aniversaire Compilation album Singles Edit Nabout Twist Claude Francois Belles Belles Belles Made to Love Phil Everly Claude Francois Vline Buggy Venus en blue jeans Venus in Blue Jeans 13 Pauvre petite fille riche Hubert Giraud Claude Francois Vline Buggy Si j avais un marteau If I Had a Hammer Lee Hays Pete Seeger Claude Francois Vline Buggy J y pense et puis j oublie It Comes and Goes Bill Anderson Claude Francois Donna Donna Dona Dona Sholom Secunda Claude Francois Vline Buggy Je sais Claude Francois Gerard Gustin Vline Buggy Quand un bateau passe Trains and Boats and Planes Burt Bacharach Hal David Claude Francois Vline Buggy Meme si tu revenais Bernard Kesslair Claude Francois Jacques Chaumelle Mais combien de temps Claude Francois Vline Buggy Reviens moi vite Claude Francois J attendrai Reach Out I ll Be There Holland Dozier Holland Claude Francois Vline Buggy Mais quand le matin Eric Charden Claude Francois Gilles Thibaut Comme d habitude Jacques Revaux Claude Francois Gilles Thibaut Pardon Jean Renard Claude Francois Gilles Thibaut Aussi loin Reg Guest Claude Francois Gilles Thibaut Avec la tete Avec le cœur Claude Francois Jean Pierre Bourtayre Yves Dessca Vline Buggy Reste Beggin Bob Gaudio Peggy Farina Jacques Plante Dans les orphelinats Claude Francois Gilles Thibaut Un monde de musique Claude Francois Ralph Bernet Une petite fille aux yeux rouges Jean Pierre Bourtayre Claude Francois Vline Buggy Un jour ou l autre Claude Francois Jacques Plante Cherche Show Me Joe Tex Claude Francois Mon cœur est une maison vide Claude Francois Jean Pierre Bourtayre Yves Dessca Vline Buggy Tout eclate tout explose Love Explosions George Harrison George Kerr Jacques Plante C est de l eau c est du vent Alice Dona Pierre Delanoe Le monde est grand les gens sont beaux Beautiful World Beautiful People Jimmy Cliff Eddy Marnay Si douce a mon souvenir Gentle on My Mind John Hartford Claude Francois Colette Rivat Parce que je t aime mon enfant Claude Francois Jean Pierre Bourtayre Yves Dessca C est la meme chanson It s the Same Old Song Holland Dozier Holland Claude Francois Colette Rivat Et pourtant le temps passe Claude Francois Paul Sebastian Lana Sebastian Michaele Je vais mieux Claude Francois Bye bye petite Julie Claude Francois Plus rien qu une adresse en commun Alain Chamfort Yves Dessca Il fait beau il fait bon Freedom Come Freedom Go Roger Greenaway Roger Cook Eddy Marnay Seule une romance Claude Francois Eddy Marnay Y a le printemps qui chante Viens a la maison Claude Francois Jean Pierre Bourtayre Jean Michel Rivat Frank Thomas En attendant Claude Francois Michele Vendome Le Lundi au soleil Patrick Juvet Jean Michel Rivat Frank Thomas Belinda Miss Belinda Des Parton Eddy Marnay Je viens diner ce soir Paul Sebastian Lana Sebastian Michaele Je t embrasse Claude Francois Jean Pierre Bourtayre Yves Dessca Jean Michel Rivat A part ca la vie est belle By the Devil I Was Tempted Doug Flett Guy Fletcher Eddy Marnay Sha la la Hier est pres de moi Yesterday Once More Richard Carpenter Eddy Marnay Chanson populaire Jean Pierre Bourtayre Nicolas Skorsky Claude Francois Le mal aime Daydreamer Terry Dempsey Eddy Marnay La musique americaine Claude Francois Jean Pierre Bourtayre Jean Michel Rivat Le telephone pleure Claude Francois Jean Pierre Bourtayre Frank Thomas Toi et moi contre le monde entier Claude Francois Jean Pierre Bourtayre Eddy Marnay Soudain il ne reste qu une chanson I ll Be Around Thom Bell Philip Hurtt Jean Michel Rivat Le chanteur malheureux Jean Pierre Bourtayre Martial Carceles Jean Michel Rivat Michel Renard Joue quelque chose de simple Claude Francois Jean Pierre Bourtayre Jean Michel Rivat Le spectacle est termine Claude Francois Jean Pierre Bourtayre Eddy Marnay Pourquoi pleurer sur un succes d ete Please Mr Please Bruce Welch John Rostill Frank Thomas 17 ans At Seventeen Janis Ian Frank Thomas Une chanson francaise Claude Francois Jean Pierre Bourtayre Nicolas Skorsky Sale bonhomme Nasty Dan Jeff Moss Eddy Marnay Dors petit homme La chevre grise Claude Francois Eddy Marnay Cette annee la December 1963 Oh What a Night Bob Gaudio Eddy Marnay La solitude c est apres Andre Popp Gilbert Sinoue Le vagabond Cyril Assous Eddy Marnay Danse ma vie Claude Francois Jean Pierre Bourtayre Pierre Delanoe Quelquefois duet with Martine Clemenceau Claude Francois Jean Pierre Bourtayre Vline Buggy Je vais a Rio I Go to Rio Peter Allen Eddy Marnay Les anges les roses et la pluie Claude Francois Jean Pierre Bourtayre Vline Buggy Toi et le soleil I Can See Clearly Now Johnny Nash Eddy Marnay C est comme ca que l on s est aime Duet with Kathalyn Jones Claude Francois Jean Pierre Bourtayre Vline Buggy Ecoute ma chanson Toto Cutugno Claude Francois Yves Dessca Et je t aime tellement And I Love You So Don McLean Claude Francois Magnolias for Ever Claude Francois Jean Pierre Bourtayre Etienne Roda Gil Alexandrie Alexandra Claude Francois Jean Pierre Bourtayre Etienne Roda Gill Bordeaux rose Eddy Pumer Peter Daltrey English songs Edit Go Where the Sun Is Brighter Viens a la maison English lyrics by Norman Newell Monday Morning Again Le lundi au soleil English lyrics by Norman Newell Love Will Call the Tune Chanson populaire English lyrics by Norman Newell Hello Happiness original song by The Drifters lyrics by Les Reed and Roger Greenaway Tears on the Telephone Le Telephone Pleure I Know Je sais English lyrics by Norman Newell You Are Une chanson francaise English lyrics by Norman Newell My Boy Parce que je t aime mon enfant English lyrics by Phil Coulter amp Bill Martin My World of Music Un monde de musique English lyrics by Norman Newell Crying in His Heart Avec le cœur avec la tete English lyrics by Norman Newell My Way Comme d habitude English lyrics by Paul Anka I Believe in Father Christmas original song by Greg Lake Stop Stop Stop Keep on Driving References Edit French film festival City of Lights City of Angels kicks off Monday latimes com 3 February 2012 France Remembers Claude Francois TheArtsdesk com 13 February 2012 Pierre Pernez Claude Francois en souvenirs City Editions 2013 French a b Richard Anthony Quand on choisit la liberte editions Florent Massot octobre 2010 French Claude Francois www ClaudeFrancois LeSite fr Archived from the original on 6 April 2012 Retrieved 22 October 2011 Bonhams Mercedes Benz 450 SEL 6 9 berline 1976 Bonhams com Roberts David 2006 British Hit Singles amp Albums 19th ed London Guinness World Records Limited p 212 ISBN 1 904994 10 5 Leading French Popular Singer Claude Francois in Home Mishap The New York Times 12 March 1978 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 1 December 2020 Belles Belles Belles regardencoulisse com in French 21 November 2003 Archived from the original on 9 December 2014 Retrieved 9 December 2014 La fille cachee de Claude Francois se confie pour la premiere fois Femme Actuelle Le MAG Femmeactuelle fr Retrieved 1 March 2020 Fabienne la mere de la fille cachee de Claude Francois brise le silence A l epoque c est vrai que j etais jeune Video Archived from the original on 18 September 2020 Retrieved 10 September 2019 Claude Francois Julie Bocquet ne serait pas sa seule enfant cachee Femme Actuelle Le MAG Femmeactuelle fr Retrieved 1 March 2020 Claude Francois Venus en blue jeans Ultratop External links EditClaude Francois biography Claude Francois discography at Discogs Claude Francois at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Claude Francois amp oldid 1124340716, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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