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Edith comes alive at the Opera

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the lyrics, but the emotion and the love and the lyrics of Edith Piaf and also the direction and the video [of the] show that we made, they are so powerful that people said they understand everything,” he says.

It’s a mournful dive into darkness followed by the glaze of warm sunshine that unites the crowd when listening to favourites such as La Vie En Rose, Non je

ne regrette rie’n and Milord (all of which feature in this production).

Plus, there’s a practical issue with translatio­ns. “The lyrics of Edith Piaf’s songs were written in 1950s-60s; so, the French of the period is different from the French now, so it doesn’t make sense to translate actually,” he laughs.

The show weaves in to and ducks out of the cobbled streets of Montmartre, France, through the lanes Piaf took on the way to profession­al singing. “There are two parts: the first act takes place in Montmartre in Paris — Edith Piaf is singing in the street with friends, before she was really famous. And the second act there is a performanc­e of the greatest songs of Edith Piaf,” explains Marsalla.

It’s the Piaf before the fame and fortune that Anne Carrere, who plays Piaf in half the performanc­es, is most fond of. “It’s the life of Edith Piaf on the streets and I have most comedy and most acting in it,” she says.

Nathalie Lhermitte, who plays the grand singer in the other production­s, has a tougher time choosing a favourite bit. [To be fair, she has many Piaf moments to choose from; she’s played the character in other production­s including Piaf, Je t’aime, Une Vie en Rose et Noir, a musical revue and Piaf, Ombres et Lumieres.] This project came with a role of the dice. Piaf! Le Spectacle has been on the run from 2015 with Carrere at the helm, but when she got pregnant last year, the show needed some practical tune-ups. Marsalla, who had heard about Lhermitte’s musical qualities, got in touch with her.

And so began a stint on stage that has rippled into performanc­es across the globe — almost 150 this year — and in front of new audiences, such as theatrebuf­fs in China.

But then, who is the real Piaf? Giggles abound when you ask the artists this question; the answer, however, remains the same: only Edith Piaf is Edith Piaf.

For Marsalla, who aims to capture the spirit of the performer, “Anne and Nathalie are the most representa­tive of Piaf’s spirit. They are [charismati­c] and bold in talent, they are practicall­y similar in terms of voice.”

“The people [tell me] often that I [sound] like Edith Piaf — I [tell] them, I am not Piaf, [she] is unique. Listen [to] Edith Piaf and just after listen [to] my voice and you will hear the difference. But I give my soul and my heart when I sing the songs of Edith Piaf,” says Carrere.

Lhermitte says she’s learnt a lot playing the singer, but most of all she’s learnt to delve deep, “You have to look very, very deep in your soul [while singing her songs]. I think can’t cheat with these songs — because she didn’t, and if you cheat, it doesn’t work.”

It’s raw emotion that sears in the lessons sung by Piaf. The video clips from her life add to the magic. You don’t need to know the words — just be human and keep an open ear.

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 ??  ?? Anne Carrere (right), who plays Piaf in the rest of the production­s.
Anne Carrere (right), who plays Piaf in the rest of the production­s.

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