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Léo Marjane

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Occupation(s)
  
Singer

Role
  
Singer

Years active
  
1931–1957

Record label
  
Pathe Records

Labels
  
Pathe Marconi

Genres
  
Chanson, Jazz

Name
  
Leo Marjane


Leo Marjane wwwwwwdutempsdescerisesauxfeuillesmortesnetfic

Born
  
27 August 1912 (age 111) (
1912-08-27
)

Origin
  
Albums
  
1938-1944, Succes et raretes 1937-1942

Similar People
  
Lucienne Delyle, Lys Gauty, Raymond Legrand, Rina Ketty, Lucienne Boyer

Leo marjane brassai seule ce soir 1941


Thérèse Maria Léonie Gendebien, known by the stage name Léo Marjane (26 August 1912 – 18 December 2016) was a French singer who reached the peak of her popularity in the late 1930s and early 1940s before her career went into sharp decline after the end of World War II.

Contents

Léo Marjane Leo Marjane Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

French singer leo marjane over the rainbow paris 1939


Early life

Thérèse Gendebien was born on 26 August 1912 in Boulogne-sur-Mer, France. Her father was a diplomat.

Career

Léo Marjane Leo Marjane Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

Marjane began her career in the early 1930s singing in cabarets in Paris. She was noticed for her warm contralto voice and the clarity of her diction, and in 1936 was signed to a contract with the Pathé-Marconi label. Her early recordings – a mixture of original songs and standards of the era such as "Begin the Beguine" and "Night and Day" – were well received and popular. The peak of Marjane's career came in the early 1940s, when she was regarded as one of France's biggest female singing stars. In 1941, she recorded her signature song, the Charles Trenet-penned "Seule ce soir" ("Alone Tonight"), which captured the feelings of the many who were experiencing wartime separation and became one of the best-loved songs of its time.

Léo Marjane Leo Marjane 1941 Nights At The Roundtable Past Daily

Marjane's success came to an abrupt halt following the Liberation of France in August 1944. She was accused of having appeared many times at venues frequented by German officers, and her numerous performances on German- and collaborator-controlled Radio Paris were also held against her. Marjane maintained that she had been no more than naïve; nevertheless, in the immediate aftermath of the end of World War II, the allegations and negative publicity in France led her to spend a period of time in England and Belgium, where she was largely unknown.

On her return to France, Marjane resumed her recording career; popular opinion had turned against her, however, and she found little further success. During this period she toured extensively in the United States, Canada and South America, and also had small roles in two films: Les deux gamines (1951) and Jean Renoir's Elena et les hommes (1956). Marjane's legacy was kept alive by devotees of French song. Subsequent to her retirement from public life, Marjane has consistently shunned most requests for television, radio, or published media interviews. She did, however, give an interview to radio channel France Musique shortly before her 90th birthday in 2002.

Personal life and death

Léo Marjane Chansons retros

Marjane first married Raymond Gérard. After she married Baron Charles de la Doucette in 1957, she retired in Barbizon, outside Paris and devoted herself to horse breeding. She turned 100 in August 2012.

Marjane died on 18 December 2016, aged 104, in Barbizon.

Léo Marjane Leo Marjane Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

Léo Marjane FS Vintage Lo Marjane Filles Sourires

Léo Marjane Chansons retros

Songs

La chapelle au clair de lune
Je suis seule ce soir
Seule ce soir

References

Léo Marjane Wikipedia