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JOHNNY HALLYDAY

France agog as stars war over rocker Johnny Hallyday’s will

France has been transfixed this week by the no-holds-barred battle over the legacy of its biggest rock star, Johnny Hallyday, with his pop star friends and one of his ex-wives being drawn into the fray.

France agog as stars war over rocker Johnny Hallyday's will
The late Johnny Hallyday and his wife Laeticia Hallyday in 2014. PHOTO: MARTIN BUREAU / AFP
Tensions between the feuding members of the country's first family of showbiz have blown up into full-scale war, with Hallyday's biological children challenging his “rewritten” will, in which he left everything to his fourth wife Laeticia, 32 years his junior.
 
The fractured family was able to maintain a unified front for the funeral of the “French Elvis” in December, when hundreds of thousands of his fans thronged the centre of Paris for a “national popular tribute”. But that uneasy truce exploded when details of the rocker's will became known on Monday.
 
Not only was his daughter, actress Laura Smet, “stupefied and hurt” that she and her half-brother David Hallyday had been left nothing, with everything going to Laeticia and eventually the two Vietnamese girls she and Hallyday adopted. But she also seemed to confirm long-running rumours that Laeticia was jealous of Smet's relationship with her father, who died at the age of 74 after a battle with lung cancer, and prevented him from seeing her.
 
 
Smet said that the woman the press had once dubbed Hallyday's “Iron Lady” had kept her from Hallyday's deathbed.
 
“All those times when we had to hide to see and call each other,” Smet wrote in an emotional open letter to her father, which she released through AFP. 
 
“It is still killing me not to have been able to say goodbye to you, Papa — do you know that at least?” she added.
 
 In-laws and outlaws
 
The revelations raised questions about the hold Laeticia and her father — disgraced nightclub owner Andre Boudou — seemed to have over Hallyday, whose fortune has been estimated at between €50 and €100 million ($62 million and $124 million).
 
Laeticia met the star when she was 20 and he was 52 in her father's Miami nightclub.
 
Boudou — who French judges sentenced to six months in jail for tax and social security fraud in 2007 — was instrumental in persuading Hallyday to leave Universal Music in 2004, a move that cost the singer much of his back catalogue.
 
A Paris nightclub they had opened together folded the same year.
 
Boudou's mother Elyette, 82 — nicknamed “Granny Rock” — heads the three companies which control Hallyday's royalties, and she also co-owns the Paris mansion in which the star died, which he had signed over to his wife four years ago.
 
Hard-living Hallyday was notorious for his cavalier attitude to both money and taxes. He was often spectacularly open-handed with his friends, offering one an Andy Warhol painting he had admired, and flying others across the world to parties in his homes in Los Angeles, the Swiss ski resort of Gstaad and his Caribbean bolthole of Saint Barts.
 
Power behind the throne
 
Laeticia, 42, was credited with bringing order to his household. So much so that in 2009, after he almost died on the operating table after a routine operation, Hallyday was forced to publicly deny that she was the real power behind the throne.
 
As the years rolled by the couple spent more and more time in California, where their adopted children went to school.
 
Unlike France, inheritance laws there also allow children to be disinherited. A fact that became shockingly apparent this week to the many Hallyday fans who railed against Laeticia on social media.
 
The singer's best friend, fellow French rock legend Eddy Mitchell, joined them Friday by telling AFP, “I don't understand how anyone could disinherit their children. As Laura's godfather, of course I support her.”
 
His intervention came after the leak of documents showing Hallyday made monthly payments to Laura and her half brother, mostly to pay mortgages.  Then Elyette Boubou told French television that she “didn't think much of Laura and David, they have already had their part (of Hallyday's wealth).”
 
But his first wife, 1960s pop star Sylvie Vartan, shot back within hours, telling AFP that she was “dismayed by the false information which is being purposely circulated” to undermine her son. She said it was her part of the marital home which she asked Hallyday to give to David as part of their divorce settlement in 1980.
 
Vartan said she was “horrified” that her son “had been deprived of the artistic heritage of his father, which I cannot tolerate, and that is why I have broken my silence.”
 
By AFP's Fiachra Gibbons

CULTURE

New songs mark sixth anniversary of French star Johnny Hallyday’s death

Fans of the late Johnny Hallyday, "the French Elvis Presley", will be able to commemorate the sixth anniversary of his death with two songs never released before.

New songs mark sixth anniversary of French star Johnny Hallyday's death

Hallyday, blessed with a powerful husky voice and seemingly boundless energy, died in December 2017, aged 74, of lung cancer after a long music and acting career.

After an estimated 110 million records sold during his lifetime – making him one of the world’s best-selling singers -Hallyday’s success has continued unabated beyond his death.

Almost half of his current listeners on Spotify are under the age of 35, according to the streaming service, and a posthumous greatest hits collection of “France’s favourite rock’n’roller”, whose real name was Jean-Philippe Leo
Smet, sold more than half a million copies.

The two new songs, Un cri (A cry) and Grave-moi le coeur (Engrave my heart), are featured on two albums published by different labels which also contain already-known hits in remastered or symphonic versions.

Un cri was written in 2017 by guitarist and producer Maxim Nucci – better known as Yodelice – who worked with Hallyday during the singer’s final years.

At the time Hallyday had just learned that his cancer had returned, and he “felt the need to make music outside the framework of an album,” Yodelice told reporters this week.

Hallyday recorded a demo version of the song, accompanied only by an acoustic blues guitar, but never brought it to full production.

Sensing the fans’ unbroken love for Hallyday, Yodelice decided to finish the job.

He separated the voice track from the guitar which he felt was too tame, and arranged a rockier, full-band accompaniment.

“It felt like I was playing with my buddy,” he said.

The second song, Grave-moi le coeur, is to be published in December under the artistic responsibility of another of the singer’s close collaborators, the arranger Yvan Cassar.

Hallyday recorded the song – a French version of Elvis’s Love Me Tender – with a view to performing it at a 1996 show in Las Vegas.

But in the end he did not play it live, opting instead for the original English-language version, and did not include it in any album.

“This may sound crazy, but the song was on a rehearsal tape that had never been digitalised,” Cassar told AFP.

The new songs are unlikely to be the last of new Hallyday tunes to delight fans, a source with knowledge of his work said. “There’s still a huge mass of recordings out there spanning his whole career,” the source said.

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