Philippine Daily Inquirer

Separating fact from fiction in Edith Piaf ’s tumultuous life

- AFP

PARIS—Even as she lay dying, Edith Piaf continued to carefully control her image—one that made her a star and, 50 years after her death, a legend.

At 47 and dying of liver cancer, Piaf ruled that only her personal photograph­er, Hugues Vassal, would be allowed to capture the images of her final days.

Tearing up as he recalled taking his last pictures of the diminutive star, Vassal said that even at the end of her life Piaf insisted—as always—on personally approving each photograph.

“She knew she would go down in history and she wanted control over the photograph­s that we would keep of her,” said the 80-year-old Vassal. It was a final act of career choreograp­hy from a star whose success was based not only on talent but also on a carefully shaped public image.

When she died on Oct. 10, 1963, Piaf was France’s greatest global star. She remains one of the bestknown French performers abroad. A 2007 film about her life, titled “La Vie en Rose,” earned an Academy Award for actress Marion Cotillard.

But as fans marked her death anniversar­y recently, a new book claims that Piaf made up or encouraged a number of falsehoods about her life.

Mythical

Robert Belleret, who wrote the just-published “Piaf, a French Myth,” said the star, who was born Edith Gassion, was not born in the streets as widely claimed but in a hospital in Paris’ working-class 20th district on Dec. 15, 1915.

The book draws on scores of unpublishe­d letters written by Piaf to her confidant, poet Jacques Bourgeat, among other personal papers.

While one biographer said she was cured of childhood blindness after a pilgrimage, and Piaf herself spoke of a miraculous healing, the new book says she did not, as widely reported, suffer from blindness as a child.

Piaf’s early years were difficult, with her mother—a singer—abandoning her. She was brought up by her grandmothe­rs, but was not weaned on red wine, the book says. Another myth.

Belleret also says the singer had no political conscience and dismisses her claim that she passed on fake papers to prisoners in German camps duringWorl­dWar II.

Rather, she moved house in 1942 to an area close to the Gestapo headquarte­rs in German-occupied Paris.

Still, no one doubts that the deep well of emotion running through Piaf’s songs was born from her own tragic life.

Her only child, a daughter born when Piaf was only 17, died at the age of two from meningitis.

The love of Piaf’s life, married French boxer Marcel Cedran, died in a plane crash.

She struggled most of her life with alcoholism and drug problems, suffering three near-fatal car crashes.

Following her death, the Archbishop of Paris denied requests for a funeral Mass, citing Piaf’s irreligiou­s lifestyle.

But thousands followed her funeral procession through the streets of Paris before she was buried in the city’s famed Pere Lachaise cemetery.

After she died, photograph­er Vassal worked with other French stars, but there was never anyone like Piaf, he said. “She had an incredible magnetism.”

 ?? AFP ?? EDITH Piaf, France’s greatest global star
AFP EDITH Piaf, France’s greatest global star

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines