The Guardian (Charlottetown)

France mourns rock star Hallyday

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France bid farewell to its biggest rock star Saturday, honouring Johnny Hallyday with an extravagan­t funeral procession down Paris’ Champs-Elysees Avenue, a presidenti­al speech and a televised church ceremony filled with the country’s most famous faces.

Few figures in French history have earned a send-off with as much pomp as the man dubbed the “French Elvis,” who notched more than 110 million in record sales since rising to fame in the 1960s.

Hallyday died Wednesday at 74 after fighting lung cancer.

In an honour usually reserved for heads of state or literary giants like 19th-century novelist Victor Hugo, Hallyday’s funeral cortege rode past Napoleon’s Arc de Triomphe monument and down the Champs-Elysees to the Place de la Concorde plaza on the Seine River.

Adding a rock touch to the event, hundreds of motorcycli­sts accompanie­d the procession. It was a nod to the lifelong passion that Hallyday, born Jean-Philippe Smet, had for motorcycle­s.

His biker image included signature leather jackets and myriad tattoos.

French President Emmanuel Macron — a Hallyday fan himself, like three generation­s of others across the Frenchspea­king world — delivered a eulogy on the steps of Paris’ Madeleine Church for the star known to the public affectiona­tely by only one name.

“Johnny belonged to you. Johnny belonged to his public. Johnny belonged to his country,” said Macron, whose voice was broadcast via speakers to the many thousands of often tearful mourners in central Paris.

“He should have fallen a hundred times, but what held him up and lifted him was your fervour, the love,” said Macron of the star’s health troubles and famously excessive lifestyle.

Hallyday’s death unleashed a wave of emotion across France, where he had been a symbol of national identity and stability for more than half a century — even though his private life had been far from stable.

Aside from the drinking, smoking and partying chronicled in juicy detail by the French press, Hallyday had been linked to a string of glamorous women and had married five times.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? French President Emmanuel Macron puts his hands on the coffin of French rocker Johnny Hallyday during the funeral service at the Madeleine churchwhil­e his wife Brigitte Macron looks on, in Paris, France, Saturday.
AP PHOTO French President Emmanuel Macron puts his hands on the coffin of French rocker Johnny Hallyday during the funeral service at the Madeleine churchwhil­e his wife Brigitte Macron looks on, in Paris, France, Saturday.

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