Juliette Gréco, Grande Dame of Chanson Française, Dies
at 93
The muse of bohemian postwar Paris, she became an internationally
known actress and singer.
The singer and actressJuliette Gréco in 1965.
Jean-Paul Sartre once said, “Gréco has a million poems in her voice.”
By Anita
Gates
Sept. 23,
2020
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/23/arts/music/juliette-greco-dead.html
Juliette
Gréco, the singing muse of bohemian postwar Paris who became the grande dame of
chanson française and an internationally known actress, died on Wednesday at
her home near Saint-Tropez. She was 93.
Her family
announced the death in a statement sent to the news agency Agence
France-Presse.
For almost
seven decades, Ms. Gréco was a loyal practitioner of the musical tradition
known as chanson française, a specific storytelling genre of popular music. The
songs are “like little plays,” she told The New York Times in 1999, adding:
“They’re typically French. We’re a people who express our love in songs, our
anger in songs, even our revolution in songs.”
She was the
darling of critics, as well as of the intellectuals whose world she inhabited.
Ms. Gréco’s ultimate rave review came from a friend, the Existentialist
philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre, who said simply, “Gréco has a million poems in
her voice.”
Her
signature hits included “Sous le Ciel de Paris” (“Under Paris Skies”), “Les
Feuilles Mortes” (which English speakers know as “Autumn Leaves”),
“Déshabillez-Moi” (“Undress Me”), “Jolie Môme” (“Pretty Kid”) and “Je Suis
Comme Je Suis” (“I Am What I Am”).
In an essay
for The Times in 1952, the pianist and composer Ernest Lubin analyzed Ms.
Gréco’s greatness. He praised her “deep, throaty voice that ranges from a near
whisper to raucous abandon,” her ability to “create a mood of astonishing
intensity and conviction,” her stage presence and even her repertoire, with its
“feeling for literary values.”
Juliette
Gréco was born on Feb. 7, 1927, in Montpellier, France, near the Mediterranean
coast. Her parents, Gérard Gréco, a Corsican-born police officer, and Juliette
(Lafeychine) Gréco, who was from Bordeaux, soon separated, and Juliette was
brought up partly by her grandmother. She was 12 when World War II began in
Europe and 13 when Hitler’s troops marched down the Champs-Élysées.
Both her
mother and her sister worked in the Resistance and were arrested and shipped
off to Nazi camps (they survived); because of their association, Juliette spent
a short time in a French prison. After the war, still in her teens, she lived
alone in Paris.
With the
help of a family friend, the actress Hélène Duc, she took drama lessons while
working as a sort of combination hostess and bouncer at Le Tabou, a jazz club
in the heart of St.-Germain-des-Prés, the Left Bank neighborhood that had
become the city’s center of bohemian life.
During this
time her habit of wearing men’s clothes, including rolled-up pants, was
necessitated by poverty and made possible by the hand-me-downs of male friends
who lived in the same pension. The style caught on.
Though she
had yet to garner attention as an actress, her distinctive look — she dressed
all in black, wore her dark hair straight and long, had thick bangs and
liberally applied black eyeliner — got the attention of leading French
photographers, who took and published pictures of her.
“I was
becoming famous without really having done anything,” Ms. Gréco told The
Guardian in 2006, “which is a very uncomfortable position.”
As a
fixture in the neighborhood, she became close friends with some of the most
admired philosophers and authors of their time: Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir,
Boris Vian and Albert Camus. And, she said, she learned just by listening to
them.
“I was all
curiosity, but I felt I didn’t have anything to give in return,” she said. “I
was at that age where all one does is take.”
By the time
the renowned prewar Right Bank cabaret Le Boeuf sur le Toît reopened in 1949,
Ms. Gréco had decided to try singing. She was offered a job helping to organize
the first show and — after seeking musical suggestions from artistic friends
like Jacques Prévert, Joseph Kosma and Sartre — she cast herself.
That was
the beginning. The first song she recorded, “Je Suis Comme Je Suis,” was
released in 1951. Her first album, “Juliette Gréco — Chante Ses Derniers
Succès,” appeared the next year. But her star-defining triumph was her 1954
concert at Olympia Hall in Paris, after a tour of the United States and South
America. During the performance she introduced “Je Hais les Dimanches” (“I Hate
Sundays”), a new number by a young songwriter, Charles Aznavour.
Ms. Gréco
had made her film debut even before her singing career began — as a nun in “Les
Frères Bouquinquant,” a 1948 drama. She went on to appear in almost 30 films,
mostly in the 1950s and ’60s. They included Jean Cocteau’s “Orphée” (1950), as
Aglaonice, an astronomer-witch; “The Sun Also Rises” (1957), an American
adaptation of Hemingway’s novel, with Tyrone Power and Ava Gardner; “The Roots
of Heaven” (1958), a drama set in Africa, in which she starred opposite Errol
Flynn; and “Crack in the Mirror” (1960), with Orson Welles.
Ms. Gréco
sang the title song, on camera, in “Bonjour Tristesse” (1958). Her final acting
role was in “Jedermanns Fest” (2002), a multinational drama with Klaus Maria
Brandauer, and she appeared as herself in “Dan les Pas de Marie Curie” (2011),
a French-Polish documentary.
She also
made a lasting impression in a 1965 French mini-series, “Belphegor, Phantom of
the Louvre.” When it was made into a feature film in 2001, she was cast in a
small role as a tribute to her influence.
Her longest
and best-known romantic relationship may have been with Miles Davis, the
celebrated jazz trumpeter, whom she met when he was appearing in Paris in 1949.
Sartre reportedly once asked him why he and Ms. Gréco were not married.
According to Ms. Gréco, Mr. Davis replied, “I love her too much to make her
unhappy.”
In 2014,
Ms. Gréco told The Guardian, “We saw each other regularly until his death” in
1991.
Ms. Gréco’s
last album, “Gréco Chante Brel,” was released in 2013. She announced her
farewell tour in 2015, telling the regional newspaper La Dépêche that
retirement was “very complicated for me.” She said she did not want to create
the sight of “an old woman hanging on.”
The last
tour date was in May 2017 in Paris.
In her later
years, Ms. Gréco was unapologetically nostalgic for the good old days.
“Today
there is much less magic,” she told The Montreal Gazette in 2015, lamenting,
among other things, the current distance between intellectuals and their
students. “Things have changed. Perhaps the young have been taken hostage by
money.”
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