Dalida |
Dalida in 1954 |
Born |
Iolanda Cristina Gigliotti
(1933-01-17)17 January 1933
Cairo, Egypt |
Died |
3 May 1987(1987-05-03) (aged 54)
Paris, France |
Resting place |
Montmartre Cemetery, Paris, France
48°53′16″N 2°19′49″E / 48.88778°N 2.33028°E / 48.88778; 2.33028 |
Monuments |
Place Dalida, Paris, France
Statue of Dalida at Montmartre Cemetery, Paris, France |
Residence |
Rue d'Orchampt 11 bis
Montmartre, Paris, France |
Nationality |
Italian, Egyptian, naturalised French |
Other names |
Iolanda Cristina Gigliotti/Yolanda Gigliotti |
Ethnicity |
Italian |
Citizenship |
French and Italian |
Occupation |
Singer
Actress |
Years active |
Singer (1956–1987)
Actress (1954–1986) |
Style |
Chanson, Classical, Eurodisco, Europop, Popular music, Disco, Franco Arabic, Raï, World music, Yé-yé |
Title |
Miss Egypt, 1954 |
Awards |
Médaille de la Présidence de la République by Général de Gaulle
Prix de l'Académie du Disque Français. |
Signature |
|
Website |
http://www.dalida.com |
Dalida (17 January 1933 – 3 May 1987), born with the Italian name Iolanda Cristina Gigliotti, was a famous singer and actress born in Egypt to Italian parents but naturalised French with the name Yolanda Gigliotti. She spent her early years in Egypt amongst the Italian Egyptian community, but she lived most of her adult life in France.[1][2] She received 55 gold records and was the first singer to receive a diamond disc.[3][4] Dalida performed and recorded in more than 10 languages including: French, Arabic, Italian, Greek, German, English, Japanese, Hebrew, Dutch and Spanish.
Renowned for the changes she wrought to the French and global music industry with her powerful and colourful performances, she is today still remembered by aficionados throughout the world. A 30-year career (she debuted in 1956 and recorded her last album in 1986, a few months before her death) and her death led to an iconic image as a tragic diva and renowned singer.
Yolanda Christina Gigliotti 'aka' Dalida was born in Shubra, Cairo, Egypt. Her family was from Calabria, Italy, but lived in Egypt, where Dalida’s father, Pietro Gigliotti, was first violinist (primo violino) at the Cairo Opera House. She was the middle child between two brothers, Orlando and Bruno (who would later in Dalida's career change his name to Orlando like his brother and become her manager). Dalida’s early life was spent in the district of Shoubra, where she attended the Scuola Tecnica Commerciale Maria Ausiliatrice, an Italian Catholic school.
In 1950, Dalida participated in the Miss Ondine beauty pageant and won the title, and shortly after began working as a model for Donna, a Cairo-based fashion house. In 1954, at the age of 20, Dalida competed in and won the Miss Egypt pageant, and was crowned Miss Egypt.[5] It was then that she was spotted by French director Marc de Gastyne and, much to the reluctance of her parents, she moved to Paris on Christmas Eve of the same year with the intention of pursuing a career in motion pictures. It was about this time she adopted the name Dalila, which was shortly thereafter changed to the more familiar Dalida.
Dalida collected 19 number one hit singles to her name in four languages (French, Italian, German, and Arabic) and has a long list of top 10, and top 20 hits in French, Italian, German, Spanish, and Arabic, and accumulated myriad top selling singles and albums largely, in France, Italy, Germany, Belgium, Spain, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Switzerland, Austria, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Greece, Canada, Russia, Japan, and Israel, spanning over forty years. Four of Dalida's English language recordings ("Alabama Song", "Money Money", "Let Me Dance Tonight", and "Kalimba de Luna"), gained moderate success primarily in France and Germany, without being widely distributed in the UK and US markets. Worldwide sales of her music are estimated at over 125 million,[6] establishing her as one of the most noteworthy multi-lingual recording artists of the 20th century.
Dalida's mother tongue was Italian. She learned Egyptian Arabic and French growing up in Cairo, and improved her French after establishing herself in Paris in 1954. She later achieved command of the English language as well as reasonable conversational skills in German and Spanish. Dalida also had the aptitude of greeting her fans in basic Japanese. She was considered as a pop and music icon in Japan and her concerts there were met with almost unprecedented enthusiasm. Once during a concert in Japan, Dalida felt ill and couldn't continue to perform. The organisers expected an enraged reaction due to the cancellation of the concert, but when Dalida came onstage and explained to her fans, that she couldn't perform, she was met with great applause and her name echoed everywhere. She promised to hold the concert again, a promise, which she soon fulfilled.
Dalida's singing career started in Egypt, when she was discovered by Cherif Kamel, host of the "Hit Parade" at the Geuzira Sporting Club during the early 1950s. Dalida's quest for a career in French cinema proved to be of limited success. Instead, she began taking singing lessons, and was booked as a cabaret act on the Champs-Élysées, which proved successful. Performing the song "Étrangère au Paradis" in a variety show at Bruno Coquatrix’ recently opened Olympia theatre, Dalida was introduced to Lucien Morisse and Eddie Barclay, who played a considerable part in launching the starlet’s career. Morisse was artistic producer of the popular Radio Europe 1, and Barclay an established record producer. After signing a recording contract with Barclay, Dalida’s debut single "Madona" was promoted heavily by Morisse, and was a moderate success. However, the release of "Bambino" in 1956 would prove to be even more triumphant – it spent 46 weeks in the French top ten and remains one of the biggest-selling singles in French history, and for its sales (which exceeded 300,000 copies) Dalida was awarded her first gold disc, presented on 17 September 1957. The song "Bambino" echoed everywhere in France and was a success even beyond the French frontiers. In the same year, she would also support Charles Aznavour at the Olympia. The follow-up single to "Bambino", the exotic-sounding and mesmerizing "Gondolier", was released in the Christmas on 1957, was also a great success, as were other early releases such as "Come Prima (Tu Me Donnes)", "Ciao Ciao Bambina", and a cover of The Drifters’ "Save the Last Dance for Me", "Garde-Moi la Dernière Danse". These classical songs mark the first phase of Dalida's album and maintain their charm even today.
Dalida toured extensively from 1958 through the early 1960s, playing dates in France, Egypt, Italy, and the United States. Her tours of Egypt, and Italy spread her fame outside of France and Dalida soon became well-known throughout Europe. However, she waited too long before entering America's music scene and though great names of the American music industry wanted to introduce her to the United States, she refused commenting that "I took too long to start here". However some of her English songs and her performance at the Carnegie Hall in New York were much applauded.
In 1961, Dalida performed a month of shows at the Olympia in Paris, with each selling out completely.a Shortly afterwards Dalida embarked upon a tour of Hong Kong and Vietnam. Throughout the 1960s Dalida would frequently perform sell-out shows at the Olympia, and international dates became more frequent. In December 1968, she was awarded the Médaille de la Présidence de la République by General Charles de Gaulle, the only person from the music industry to have received this medal.
The early 1970s became a transitional period for the singer, highlighted by some of her most successful singles. After gaining a keen interest in academia in the mid-1960s she chose to sing songs with more profound lyrics. She tried to probe into her inner-self and declared, that she would sing only those songs, which have a meaning for her. Bruno Coquatrix was dubious about Dalida’s career evolution, and was hesitant to book her for a series of performances in 1971. Dalida hired the hall herself, and her show was met with an impressive public response, thus forcing the world to acknowledge, that a new and more powerful performer had emerged in Dalida. In 1973, a French version of the Italian song "Paroles Paroles", originally performed by Mina, was recorded by Dalida and her close friend Alain Delon. The song became a big hit and was the number one single in France and Japan. It was played consistently on French radios, at the request of listeners. The follow-up, "Il Venait d'Avoir Dix-Huit Ans", reached number one in nine countries, and sold three and a half million copies in Germany. The way Dalida interpreted the song left people amazed. "Gigi l'Amoroso", released in 1974, would actually perform better in the charts than its predecessor, reaching number one in 12 countries. A success, which many other singers couldn't achieve. Touring would follow this period of unprecedented sales, with Dalida performing in Japan, Canada and Germany. In February 1975, French music critics presented the singer with the prestigious Prix de l'Académie du Disque Français.
1976 saw another career reinvention for Dalida; releasing what is widely regarded as the first French disco single, "J'attendrai". Around the same time, the popularity of the variety show in France was soaring, and Dalida made many television appearances during this period, not only in France but across Europe. In 1978, she recorded "Salma Ya Salama", based on a traditional Egyptian folk song, which due to its chart success was translated from Arabic into French, Italian, and German. It was amongst the first Ethnic fusion hits in the world. Part of the lyrics are based on an Egyptian folk song about homesickness and celebrating the Egyptian nation.
This and other songs in Arabic by Dalida (such as "Helwa ya Baladi" and "Ahsan Nass") became extremely popular in Egypt, making Dalida one of the first singers to break through the barrier separating Arab and Western musics. She was received in Egypt like a queen with the Egyptian President himself coming at the airport to welcome her. Egyptians were soon wooed by her beauty, voice, charm, determination and wonderful songs and interpretations.
Her close friend Fairouz was the other major artist to be crossing the boundaries from East to West, with her immense success throughout Europe, North and South America, and Australia.
The success of "Salma ya Salama" was followed by the first French medley single, "Génération ‘78", a disco-fused combination of her biggest hit singles to date. It also became the first French single to be accompanied by a video clip. During this disco period, Dalida would earn a gay audience, a following, which is still maintained today. In November, Dalida performed a Broadway-themed show at Carnegie Hall in New York, choreographed by Lester Wilson, who created the dance routines for John Travolta in the previous year’s 1977 cinema smash Saturday Night Fever. Her performance was highly praised by critics and audiences alike. Two years later, following the success of "Monday Tuesday... Laissez-Moi Danser" in the summer of 1979, she would replicate the show at the Palais des Sports, and each show sold-out, encouraging the singer to embark on a national tour, which lasted until the autumn. In the same year, the lengthy "Gigi in Paradisco", a follow-up to the earlier "Gigi l'Amoroso", was released. Though it was not as popular as its predecessor, it was highly acclaimed and the new generation was soon dancing on Dalida disco tunes. The way Dalida shifted from a classical performer to a grave performer singing songs full of emotion (such as "Avec le temps", "Parlez-moi de lui" and "Darla dirladada", amongst others), to a Diva and pop star like figure making the stage glow with her hit dance numbers and colourful costumes and finally to a grief-stricken singer singing famous songs, which announce her death (particularly songs such as "Mourir sur Scene", "Bravo" and "Téléphonez-moi"), Dalida showed, that she was a strong-willed woman shifting with time and fashion. Her personal problems and troubling relationships, however, trapped her in the jaws of sadness leading to her suicide.
1981 marked the release of "Rio do Brasil", and several dates were played at The Olympia in Paris, emulating her successful 1980 tour. On the night of her first performance she became the first singer in the world to be awarded with a diamond disc, in recognition of her record sales, which at that point in her career had exceeded 86 million. She was therefore much ahead of American singer Madonna since she was the first person to receive this success, thus paving the way for women to deliver powerful performances. Dalida spent much of 1982 and 1984 on tour, releasing the album Les P'tits Mots in 1983, which featured hit singles "Lucas" and "Mourir Sur Scène". The album Dali was released in 1984, and was accompanied by the release of several singles, including "Soleil", "Pour te dire je t'aime", a cover of Stevie Wonder’s "I Just Called to Say I Love You", and "Kalimba de Luna", originally recorded by Tony Esposito. All three achieved moderate chart success, and her next 1986 album, Le visage de l'amour, would become her last album of completely new recordings (except the final song being "Mourir sur scène").
Other hit performances of Dalida include "The Lambeth Walk"; both in English and in French. The song "Je suis malade", written by Serge Lama and made into a success by Dalida, reflects the singer's personal torments and unhappiness. The emotions with which she sang the song is unmatched even today. At the peak of her success, an obsessed fan of her tried to kidnap her in Canada by using a hammer. Fortunately enough, he didn't succeed.
Undaunted, she continued to deliver success after success: namely "Ensemble", "Ne lui dis pas", "La Valse des vacances", a cover version of Édith Piaf's "La vie en rose", "Born to sing"/"Mourir sur scène", amongst others.
Dalida underwent two major ophthalmic operations in 1985, forcing her to put her career on hiatus. The fear of her childhood days return as she again had to operate her eyes. The stage lights started to trouble her. In 1986, she would play the role of a young grandmother in the Youssef Chahine film "Le Sixième Jour", for which she received favourable critical response. Her last live performance took place in Ankara, Turkey, in 1987.
Despite enormous career success, Dalida’s private life was marred by a series of failed relationships and personal problems.
On January 1967, Dalida took part to the San Remo Festival with new lover, an Italian singer, songwriter and actor Luigi Tenco. The song he presented was "Ciao Amore Ciao" ("Bye Love, Bye"), which he sang together with Dalida. Tenco allegedly committed suicide on January 27, 1967, after learning that his song had been eliminated from the final competition. Tenco was found in his hotel room with a bullet wound in his left temple and a note announcing, that his gesture was against the jury and public's choices during the competition. Only days earlier, Tenco's wedding to Dalida had been announced. It was Dalida, who discovered his body. One month later, Dalida attempted to commit suicide by drug overdose at the Prince of Wales hotel in Paris. She spent 5 days in a coma and several months convalescing, only going back to the stage the following October.
In December 1967, just after her first suicide attempt, she became pregnant by an 18-year-old Italian student, Lucio. She decided to abort but the surgery left her infertile.[citation needed]
In September 1970, her pygmalion, lover from 1956 to 1961 and former husband Lucien Morisse, with whom she was still on very good terms, committed suicide by shooting himself in the head.
From 1969 to 1971, she had a relationship with philosopher and writer Arnaud Desjardins. However they split, because he was married.[citation needed]
In April 1975, her close friend singer Mike Brant leapt to his death from an apartment in Paris. He was 28. Dalida had contributed to his success in France and she had been the first to visit him in hospital after his first suicide attempt in November 1974.
In July 1983, her lover from 1972 to 1981, Richard Chanfray, committed suicide by inhaling the exhaust gas of his Renault R25 car.
After she broke-up with Richard Chanfray, Dalida had relationships with various anonymous men such as a sound technician, a lawyer, an Egyptian jumbo jet pilot, and lastly a French doctor named François during the period 1986-1987.[citation needed]
On 3 May 1987 Dalida died as a result of an overdose of barbiturates, leaving a suicide note "La vie m'est insupportable... Pardonnez-moi", which reads "Life has become unbearable for me... Forgive me."[7][8]
Dalida was buried in the Montmartre Cemetery, Paris, and a life-size statue of her was erected outside her tomb.[9][10]
Since her death, Dalida has become a cult figure to a new generation of fans. In 1988, the Encyclopædia Universalis commissioned a poll, which was eventually published in the daily newspaper Le Monde, the aim of which was to reveal the personalities, who had the greatest impact on French society. Dalida polled second, behind Général de Gaulle.[citation needed]
In 1997, the corner of the rues Girardon and Abreuvoir in the Butte Montmartre, Paris, was inaugurated as Place Dalida and a life-size bust to her memory was erected.[11] In 1999, a 3-CD box-set compiling her greatest hits was released. In 2000, Dalida's longtime friend Charles Aznavour recorded the hit "De la scène à la Seine", a joyful song of her life in France, and in 2002, the French government honoured her memory with a postage stamp done in commemoration of the 15th anniversary of her death. In the same year, Universal Music Group released Dalida's early album releases in special-edition packaging, with all of the tracks digitally remastered. Her output has also been the subject of various remix albums. She sold a total of 13 million records from 1956 to 2006. Since her death, many of Dalida's hits have been remixed to modern techno and dance beats, topping the charts in various countries to this day.http://www.infodisc.fr/Artiste_Ventes.php
In 1999 the play Solitudini – Luigi Tenco e Dalida, written and directed by Maurizio Valtieri, was performed in Rome.
In 2005, her life was documented in the two-part TV film Dalida, in the role of Dalida was Sabrina Ferilli.[12]
From 11 May to September 2007, the Paris City Hall commemorated the 20th anniversary of Dalida's death with an exhibition of her outfits and previously unreleased photographs.
This is a chronologically ordered list of films in which Dalida appeared.
Year |
Title |
Character |
Director |
Notes |
Ref |
1954 |
Joseph et ses frères (France: French title)
aka "Joseph and His Brothers" |
|
|
Film, starring Omar Sharif (Arabic: عمر الشريف) |
[13] |
1954 |
Le Masque de Toutankhamon
aka "Le trésor des pharaons" (France) |
Dalida |
Marco de Gastyne |
Film, starring Gil Vidal and Samia Gamal (Arabic: سامية جمال) |
[14] |
1954 |
Sigara wa Kass
aka "Un verre et une cigarette"
aka "A Cigarette and a Glass" (International: English title)
aka "A Glass and a Cigarette" (International (DVD box title) (English title)) |
Iolanda (as Dalila) |
Niazi Mostafa |
Film, starring Samia Gamal (Arabic: سامية جمال) |
[15] |
1958 |
Brigade des mœurs |
Herself |
Maurice Boutel |
Film, co-starring with Eddy Barclay |
[16] |
1958 |
Rapt au deuxième bureau
aka "Operation Abduction" |
Bella Morena |
Jean Stelli |
Film, co-starring with Frank Villard |
[17] |
1960 |
"Che femmina... e che dollari!" (Italy: Italian title)
aka Parlez-moi d'amour (France: French title) |
Laura Pisani |
Giorgio Simonelli |
Film, co-starring with Jacques Sernas |
[18] |
1963 |
L'inconnue de Hong Kong
aka "Stranger from Hong-Kong" (US)
aka "The Unknown of Hong Kong" (International: English title: informal title) |
Georgia la chanteuse |
Jacques Poitrenaud |
Film, co-starring with Serge Gainsbourg and Tania Béryl |
[19] |
1966 |
La morale de l'histoire |
Herself |
Claude Dagues |
Television movie |
[20] |
1968 |
13 jours en France |
Herself |
Claude Lelouch and François Reichenbach |
Documentary about the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France. Features Charles de Gaulle, Dalida, Johnny Hallyday and Jean-Claude Killy. (Uncredited.) |
[21] |
1968 |
Menage all'italiana
aka "Marriage Italian Style" (International: English title) |
Anna |
Franco Indovina |
Film, co-starring with Ugo Tognazzi |
[22] |
1968 |
Io ti amo
aka "I Love You"
aka "Dalida, agapi mou" (Greece: Greek title) |
Judy |
Antonio Margheriti |
Film, co-starring with Alberto Lupo |
[23] |
1977 |
Comme sur des roulettes
aka "As Easy as Pie" (International: English title) |
Herself |
Nina Companéez |
Film |
[24] |
1977 |
Dalida: Pour toujours |
Herself |
Michel Dumoulin |
Documentary |
[13] |
1986 |
Le sixième jour
aka "The Sixth Day" (International: English title)
aka "Al-yawm al-Sadis" (Arabic title) (Arabic: اليوم السادس)
aka "Der sechste Tag" (Germany: German title) |
Saddika |
Youssef Chahine
(Arabic: يوسف شاهين) |
Film, co-starring with Mohsen Mohieddin |
[25] |
1997 |
Le grand voyage |
Herself |
Philippe Kohly |
Documentary |
[13] |
2005 |
Dalida: Le Film |
Dalida
(singing voice) |
Joyce Buñuel |
Television mini-series (film)
singing voice for actress Sabrina Ferilli |
[26] |
Year |
Award |
Country |
Category |
Result |
1958 |
Radio Monte Carlo Oscars |
France |
Radio Monte Carlo Oscar |
Won |
1958 |
Paris Olympia music hall Bravos |
France |
Paris Olympia music hall Bravos (Shared recognition with Yves Montand) |
Won |
1959 |
Platinum Oscar Awards |
Italy |
Platinum Oscar Award |
Won |
1959 |
Golden She-Wolf Award |
Italy |
Golden She-Wolf Award |
Won |
1959 |
L'Oscar de la chanson Awards |
France |
L'Oscar de la chanson Award for Best Song |
Won |
1959 |
Radio Monte Carlo Oscar Awards |
France |
Radio Monte Carlo Oscar |
Won |
1960 |
Grand Prix Awards |
Italy |
Grand Prix Award for Best Italian Song (Shared award with Charles Aznavour) |
Won |
1961 |
Radio Monte Carlo Oscar Awards |
Italy |
Radio Monte Carlo Oscar |
Won |
1962 |
Radio Monte Carlo Oscar Awards |
Italy |
Radio Monte Carlo Oscar (Shared award with Johnny Hallyday) |
Won |
1963 |
Radio Monte Carlo Oscar Awards |
France |
Radio Monte Carlo Oscar for Most Successful International Artist |
Won |
1964 |
Juke Box Global Oscar Awards |
Italy |
Juke Box Global Oscar for The Year's Most-Played Artist on Jukeboxes in Italy |
Won |
1965 |
Cico Viola Prize |
Brazil |
Cico Viola Prize for "Zorba o Greco" |
Won |
1966 |
Paris Olympia music hall Bravos |
France |
Les Bravos du Musique Hall |
Won |
1967 |
Golden Caravel Awards |
Italy |
Golden Caravel Award |
Won |
1968 |
Canzonissima Oscar |
Italy |
Canzonissima Oscar |
Won |
1969 |
MIDEM Prize |
Italy |
MIDEM Prize for Highest Selling Musical Artist |
Won |
1969 |
Radio Luxembourg Hit Parade Oscar Awards |
France |
Radio Luxembourg Hit Parade Oscar |
Won |
1969 |
Radio Luxembourg Hit Parade Oscar Awards |
France |
Radio Luxembourg Hit Parade Oscar |
Won |
1972 |
Popularity Oscar |
France |
Popularity Osca for Most Popular Artist |
Won |
1973 |
APPCB (Association Professionnelle de la Presse Cinématographique Belge) Awards |
Belgium |
Gold Medal Award |
Won |
1974 |
Golden Gigi award |
Spain |
Golden Gigi Award (Special award) for Extraordinary Record Sales |
Won |
1974 |
Golden Heart Awards |
Spain |
Golden Heart Award for Most Popular Artist in Spain |
Won |
1975 |
L'Académie du Disque Français Awards |
France |
Global Oscar Oscar Mondial du Disque Award for "Gigi l'Amoroso" and "Il venait d'avoir dix-huit ans" |
Won |
1975 |
Oscar Awards |
France |
Eight Oscar Awards awarded at the Olympia in recognition of extraordinary, rare, and, distinguished achievements. |
Won |
1975 |
Golden Lion Awards |
Germany |
Golden Lion |
Won |
1976 |
French Summer Carnaval Awards |
France |
French Summer Carnaval Award |
Won |
1976 |
French Academy Awards |
France |
French Academy Award for a number one single in nine countries |
Won |
1979 |
Radio Monte Carlo Awards |
France |
Croque-Musique Award |
Won |
1981 |
Goldene Europa Awards |
Germany |
Goldene Europa for Artist of the Year in Germany |
Won |
1985 |
Golden Butterfly Awards |
Turkey |
Golden Butterfly Award |
Won |
1987 |
Dalida Award |
Turkey |
Dalida Award (Special Award) for Best Performance in Anatolia |
Won |
- 1950: Dalida won the title of Miss Ondine.[27]
- 1954: Dalida won the Miss Egypt beauty pageant and crowned Miss Egypt 1954.[28]
- 1962: Calabrian Citizen of Honour.[27]
- 1968: Godmother of Montmartre street urchins.
- 1977: Egyptian Medal of Honour
- 1984: Dalida declined the French honour Légion d'honneur award, the highest order of France, marking the first time she ever declined an honour.
- Medals[29]
- 1968: Medal of the City of Paris.
- 1968: the French President's Medal (Médaille de la Présidence de la République) awarded by President of the French Republic Général de Gaulle on 5 December 1968, representing the only time in history an artist has ever been presented with this honour by the President of France to date.
- 1968: Ruby Cross (Croix de Vermeil) (Commander of Arts, Sciences and Letters).[30]
- 1981: Dalida was awarded a medal by then-French Minister of Defence Charles Hernu.
- Foreign honours[29]
- City of Graulhet Medal of Honour, 1980
- Belgian Medal of Honour, 1984
- Canadian medal for talent and wisdom, 1985
- 1987: Dalida was posthumously honoured with a commemorative coin minted by The French Mint, Monnaie de Paris, issued in gold, bronze and silver, bearing her effigy.[31][32]
- 1988: Dalida was posthumously honoured by the "International Star Registry" (US), with the issuance of a diploma, awarded three years after her death.
- 1997: Dalida was posthumously honoured by the City of Paris with a square named in her memory, named "Dalida Square", located at the angle of rues Girardon and Abreuvoirs, in the 18th arrondissement (borough) of Paris, France.
- 1997: Dalida became one of only three women in France to have a statue erected to her, along with Joan of Arc and Sarah Bernhardt.
- 1998: Dalida was posthumously honoured in Egypt in a tribute ceremony which took place on 27 October in Cairo and the "Dalida Prize" was awarded in her honour.
- 2001: Dalida was posthumously honoured by the French government with a second stamp bearing her likeness which was released by La Poste, the French postal service, as part of the Song Artists series. 10,157,601 copies were sold.
- 2003: Awarded prize for "Greatest Singer of the Century" in France, based on three criteria: numbers of album and single sales, number of radio airplays and chart positions. Dalida was placed third after Madonna and Céline Dion. In 2003 Dalida remained the number one favourite artist in France.
- 1965 – F.O.P. Poll: 'Favourite French singer'
- 1976 – Dalida was voted 'Woman of the Year' in Canada, ahead of Jackie Kennedy)
- 1982 – Paris Match magazine survey revealed that Dalida was the only representative from show business to appear in a list of most influential French women.
- 1985 – Dalida was voted 'Favourite French singer' (Télé 7 Jours magazine).
- 1986 – VSD magazine published a survey in which Dalida was voted 'Favourite French singer'.
- 1988 – SOFRES/Encyclopædia Universalis: In a survey asking the French public which events had the greatest impact on the French public between 1968 and 1988, 16% of the French public voted the 'Death of Général de Gaulle' and 10% voted the 'Death of Dalida'.
- 2001 – IFOP Survey: Dalida was voted the 'Most important female singer who had the greatest impact on French society in the 20th century', along with Édith Piaf.
- 2005 – Dalida was voted the 'Favourite singer in 2004' amongst Italians, and held seventh place amongst the most collected musical artists in Italy.
- 2005 – Dalida was voted 'Top 58th French person of all time' in a survey sponsored by the France 2 television channel. The only women from show business which appeared in this list were Catherine Deneuve, Brigitte Bardot, Simone Signoret, Édith Piaf and Dalida.
- Geographic locations
- France: Dalida Square, 18 arr., Paris
- Quebec: rue Dalida, Laval, Que., Canada
- Jean Sobieski: Dalida (Oil on canvas, 19??)
- Magguy Crouzet: Dalida (Portrait in dot-sculpture, 1976)
- Michel Souvais: Dalida, femme est la nuit (Oil on canvas, 1977)
- Alain Aslan: Dalida (Yolanda Gigliotti), funerary statue (Bronze sculpture, 1987)
- Alain Aslan: Dalida (Yolanda Gigliotti) (Bronze bust, 1997)
- Francesco Gallo: Dalida (Yolanda Gigliotti) (Bronze sculpture, 2007)
- FS62: Dalida (Black and white portrait in acrylic, 2008)
- The Dalida song "Born to Sing" (original French title "Mourir sur scène" and later translated to English, Italian and Spanish) was covered in English by Dalida's long time friend Shirley Bassey, released in 1986 as a B-side of a Towerbell Records single (A-side: "There's No Place Like London"). Although the recording has never been re-released, Shirley Bassey performed the song in 1995 during some concerts as part of her 40th anniversary world tour.[33] Shirley Bassey's interpretation of "Born to Sing" is also sometimes titled or referred to as "I Was Born to Sing Forever."[34]
- In 1996, Céline Dion and Alain Delon performed the song "Paroles, paroles" on the 1996 New Year's Eve France 2 television programme.
- In 1998, Sarah Brightman’s released the song "There for Me", an English language version of "Fini, la comédie". The song first appeared on her Time to Say Goodbye album, featuring José Cura. It was also released as a single, with ‘O mio babbino caro” as the B-side track. Often on her 2000/2001 La Luna tour, Brightman would perform this duet with Josh Groban, and this was included in the La Luna: Live in Concert DVD.[35]
- The song "De la scène à la Seine", by Charles Aznavour, from his year 2000 album "Azvanour, 2000" is a tribute to Dalida.
- In 2000, Sarah Hohn (featuring Wehrlen), released a cover of the song "Paroles, paroles" in tribute to Dalida and Alain Delon.[36]
- In 2002, an interpretation of the song "Pour ne pas vivre seul", by Firmine Richard, was included in the movie "8 femmes", by François Ozon.[37]
- In 2004, the song "Laissez-moi danser (Monday Tuesday)" was covered by Star Academy 4 in France, under the shorter name "Laissez-moi danser", in honour of Dalida.[38]
[39]
- In 2005, Lebanese singer Grace Deeb released a cover of the song "Helwa ya baladi", which reached number one spots over the charts.
- In 2007, Spanish singer Luz Casal released the song "18 años", a new Spanish-language interpretation of "Tenía 18 años", the Spanish version of "Il venait d'avoir 18 ans" (English version: "He Must Have Been Eighteen"), in honour of French music, with entirely new Spanish lyrics, on her album "Vida tóxica".[40][41]
- In 2007, Italian singer Patty Pravo released the tribute album "Spero che ti piaccia... Pour toi", in tribute to Dalida.[42]
- In 2007, Lebanese singer Elissa (Arabic: إليسا) paid hommage to the chanteuse, covering her famous song, "Helwa ya baladi".
- In 2007, Italian singer-songwriter Franco Battiato released the album "Fleurs 2", containing the track "Il venait d'avoir 18 ans", a cover in hommage to the singer, performed with the participation of Persian vocalist Sepideh Raissadat (Persian: سپیده رئیس سادات).
- In 2008, French singer Michèle Torr covered the song "Pour ne pas vivre seul", released on her album "Ces années-là", in hommage to Dalida. A live version of her rendition was also released on her live DVD "Olympia 2008", and digital album of the same name, both released in 2009.[43]
- In 2009, Lara Fabian released the tribute album "Toutes les femmes en moi", containing an interpretation of the song "Il venait d'avoir 18 ans", of which the former is in part tribute, and the latter in tribute to Dalida.[44]
- In 2009, Arthanor Music released the tribute album "Un clip de toi (Hommage à Dalida, 1988)", containing four tracks originally recorded in 1988 by David Heissen and dedicated to Dalida.
- In 2012, French singer Amel Bent rendered hommage to Dalida by performing two of Dalida's signature songs "À Ma Manière" and "Mourir Sur Scène" on France 3's television programme "Chabada".
- In 2012, the double album "Depuis qu’elle est partie" containing a hommage CD titled "Ils chantent Dalida" featuring covers of several of Dalida's songs, performed by French singers Amel Bent, Christophe Willem, Hélène Segara, Patrick Fiori, Lara Fabian, Christophe (singer), Dany Brillant, and others, will be released in the month of April.
The following Dalida songs have appeared in the formentioned motion pictures or TV series.
Year |
Motion picture |
Songs |
Director |
Ref |
1961 |
Mädchen für die Mambo-Bar
aka "Des filles pour le mambo bar" (France: French title)
aka "$100 a Night" (US: dubbed version: English title)
aka "Girls for the Mambo-Bar" (UK)
|
"Am Tag, als der Regen kam" |
Wolfgang Glück |
[45] |
1979 |
Série noire |
"Le Lambeth Walk" |
Alain Corneau |
[46] |
1984 |
La Triche |
"Fini, la comédie" and "Je suis toutes les femmes" |
Yannick Bellon |
[47] |
1991 |
Hors la vie (aka "Out of Life") |
"Salma ya salama" |
Maroun Bagdadi |
[48] |
1994 |
Mina Tannenbaum |
"Il venait d'avoir 18 ans" |
Martine Dugowson |
[49] |
1995 |
Gazon Maudit (aka "French Twist") |
"Bambino" |
Alain Chabat |
[50] |
1995 |
Pigalle |
Unknown |
Karim Dridi |
[51] |
1996 |
Pédale douce |
"Bambino", "Salma ya salama" and "Je suis toutes les femmes" |
Gabriel Aghion |
[52] |
1996 |
Un Air de Famille (aka "Family Resemblances" (US)) |
"Come prima" |
Cédric Klapisch |
[53] |
1997 |
On connaît la chanson
aka "Same Old Song" (US) |
"Paroles, paroles" |
Alain Resnais |
[54] |
1997 |
Mémoires d'immigrés, l'héritage maghrébin |
"Helwa ya baladi" |
Yamina Benguigui |
[55] |
1998 |
A Soldier's Daughter Never Cries
aka "La fille d'un soldat ne pleure jamais" (France)
aka "Soldier's Daughter Never Cries" (Australia: TV title)
|
"Ciao amore ciao" |
James Ivory |
[56] |
1999 |
Novios |
"Gigi l'Amoroso" |
Joaquín Oristrell |
[57] |
1999 |
Recto/Verso |
"Paroles, paroles" |
Jean-Marc Longval |
[58] |
1999 |
Tontaine et Tonton |
"Il venait d'avoir 18 ans" and "Gigi l'amoroso" |
Tonie Marshall |
[59] |
1999 |
Un pont entre deux rives aka "The Bridge" |
Unknown |
Gérard Depardieu |
[60] |
2001 |
Souffle |
"Buenas noches mi amor" |
Muriel Coulin and Delphine Coulin |
[61] |
2001 |
Mauvais genres
aka "Transfixed" (Canada: English title: festival title) (US)
aka "Bad Genres" (International: English title: festival title)
aka "Gender Bias" (US) |
"Il venait d'avoir 18 ans" |
Francis Girod |
[62] |
2001 |
Absolument fabuleux |
"Il venait d'avoir 18 ans" |
Gabriel Aghion |
[63] |
2001 |
C'est la vie |
"Darla dirladada" |
Jean-Pierre Améris |
[64] |
2001 |
Paroles de Bibs |
"Paroles, paroles" |
Jocelyne Lemaire-Darnaud |
[65] |
20XX |
La Bonne Adresse |
"Pezzettini di bikini" |
Gary Goldman |
[66] |
2002 |
L'Adversaire aka "The Adversary" |
"Histoire d'un amour" |
Nicole Garcia |
[67] |
2003 |
Perduto Amor |
"Itsi bitsi petit bikini" |
Franco Battiato |
[68] |
2005 |
Dalida: Le Film |
Principal singer on entire soundtrack |
Joyce Buñuel |
[69] |
2005 |
L'un reste, l'autre part |
"Il venait d'avoir 18 ans" |
Claude Berri |
[70] |
2005 |
The Secret Life of Words (International: English title) (UK) (US)
aka "La vida secreta de las palabras" (Spain)
aka "La vida secreta de les paraules" (Spain: Catalan title) |
"Histoire d'un amour" |
Isabel Coixet |
[71] |
2006 |
OSS 117, Le Caire nid d'espions
aka "OSS 117, Nest of Spies" |
"Bambino" |
Michel Hazanavicius |
[72] |
2007 |
Michou D'Auber |
"Bambino" |
Thomas Gilou |
[73] |
2007 |
L'Ennemi intime
aka "Intimate Enemies" (Canada: English title) |
"Come prima" |
Florent Emilio Siri |
[74] |
2008 |
Mesrine : L'Instinct de mort |
"Romantica" and "La Danse de Zorba" |
Jean-François Richet |
[75] |
2010 |
Les Amours Imaginaires (Canada: Original title)
aka "Heartbeats" (US) (Europe: English title: festival title)
aka Fantastikes agapes (Greece: Greek title)
aka Love, Imagined (International: English title)
|
"Bang Bang" |
Xavier Dolan |
[76] |
2011 |
Les femmes du 6è étage (France: Original title)
aka "Las chicas de la 6ª planta" (Spanish title)
aka "The Women on the 6th Floor" (English title)
aka "Service Entrance" |
"Itsi bitsi petit bikini" |
Philippe Le Guay |
[77] |
2011 |
Le Skylab (France: Original title) |
"Bambino" |
Julie Delpy |
[78] |
Several theatrical productions have been made about Dalida's life. In 1999, "Solitudini – Luigi Tenco e Dalida", written and directed by Maurizio Valtieri, was performed in Rome.[79] "Dalida: Une Vie", directed by René Simard and under the authorisation of Orlando Productions, was performed from October 2003 to June 2006, in Quebec, Canada, and was shown in Beirut, Lebanon in May 2004.[80] In 2005, the play "Dalida, à quoi bon vivre au mois de mai ?", written by Joseph Agostini and Caroline Sourrisseau, was performed at the Ateliers Théâtre in Montmartre.[81]
- Dalida, by Michel Delain, Éditions de l'Heure, 1962. (French)
- Dalida, La gloire et les larmes, by Pascal Sevran, 1976. (French)
- 25 ans de triomphe, by Christian Page, Delmas Éditeur, 1981. (French)
- Dalida, by Christian Page, Têtes D'affiche, 1982. (French)
- Dalida, mon amour, by Anne Gallimard and Orlando, Édition NRJ, 1984. ISBN 2-908070-01-4 and ISBN 978-2-908070-01-9. (French)
- Lorsque l’amour s’en va, by Catherine Benoît Sévin, Michel Lafon, 1987; Carrere, 1989. ISBN 2-86804-406-9 and ISBN 978-2-908070-01-9. (French)
- Dalida, mon amour, by Anne Gallimard and Orlando, Édition NRJ, 1989. ISBN 2-908070-01-4 and ISBN 978-2-908070-01-9. (French)
- Dalida mon amour, by Orlando, Hachette Littérature, 1991. ISBN 2-7382-0362-0 and ISBN 978-2-7382-0362-5. (French)
- Dalida, Histoire d’une femme, by Jean-François Josselin and Jeff Barnel, Jean-Claude Lattès, 1994. ISBN 2-7096-1450-2 and ISBN 978-2-7096-1450-4. (French)
- Les larmes de la gloire, by Bernard Pascuito, Éditions Michel Lafon, 1997. ISBN 2-84098-301-X and ISBN 978-2-84098-301-9. (French)
- Dalida, by C. Daccache, Éditions Vade Retro, 1998. ISBN 2-909828-51-4 and ISBN 978-2-909828-51-0. (French)
- Dalida: Mon frère, tu écriras mes mémoires, by Catherine Rihoit, Plon, 1998. (French)
- Dalida, by Catherine Rihoit, Omnibus, 1998. ISBN 2-259-00083-5 and ISBN 978-2-259-00083-3. (French)
- Star pour toujours, by Julie Thamin, Gep, 2000. (French)
- Dalida: Entre violon et amour, by Isaline, Éditions Publibook, 2002. ISBN 2-7483-2629-6 and ISBN 978-2-7483-2629-1. (French)
- Du Nil à la scène, Jacques Brachet, Éditions Va bene and Éditions de la courtine, 2001, 2002. ISBN 2-84869-007-0 and ISBN 2-913483-36-4. (French)
- Dalida: Une oeuvre en soi, by Michel Rheault, Nota Bene, 2002. ISBN 2-89518-111-X. (French)
- Luigi Tenco. Vita breve e morte di un genio musicale, by Aldo Fegatelli Colonna, A. Mondadori, 2002. ISBN 880450087 and ISBN 978-88-04-50087-2. (Italian)
- Ciao, ciao bambina, by Henri-Jean Servat and Orlando, Éditions Albin Michel, 2003. ISBN 2-226-14298-3 and ISBN 978-2-226-14298-6. (French)
- Dalida, by Catherine Rihoit, Plon, re-published 2004. ISBN 2-259-20180-6 and ISBN 978-2-259-20180-3. (French)
- D’une rive à l’autre, by David Lelait, Payot, 2004. ISBN 2-228-89904-6 and ISBN 978-2-228-89904-8. (French)
- L’argus Dalida: Discographie mondiale et cotations, by Daniel Lesueur, Éditions Alternatives, 2004. ISBN 2-86227-428-3 and ISBN 978-2-86227-428-7. (French)
- La véritable Dalida, by Emmanuel Bonini, Éditions Pygmalion, 2004. ISBN 2-85704-902-1 and ISBN 978-2-85704-902-9. (French)
- Mademoiselle succès, Barclay France, 2004. UPC 602498110843. (French)
- Dalida: La femme de cœur, by Jeff Barnel, Éditions du Rocher, 2005. ISBN 2-268-05500-0 and ISBN 978-2-268-05500-8. (French)
- Dalida: La voce e l'anima, by Giandomenico Curi, 2005. ISBN 88-7641-687-0 and ISBN 978-88-7641-687-3. (Italian)
- Top Dalida, Éditions Paul Beuscher, 2005. ASIN B000ZG64FO. (French)
- Dalida: La voce, Il suono, L'anima, by Mino Rossi, Edizioni Franciacorta, 2005. ISBN 88-89364-01-7 and ISBN 978-88-89364-01-7. (Italian)
- Quasi sera: una storia di Tenco, by A. Montellanico, StampaAlternativa/NuoviEquilibri, 2005. ISBN 88-7226-910-5. (Italian)
- D’une rive à l’autre, by David Lelait-Helo, Éditions J'ai Lu, 2006. ISBN 2-290-34567-9 and ISBN 978-2-290-34567-2. (French)
- Ntaainta Dalida, Éditions Odos Panos and 20 ans sans elle, 2006. (French)
- Dalida passionnément, by Arianne Ravier, Éditions Favre, 2006. ISBN 2-8289-0927-1 and ISBN 978-2-8289-0927-7. (French)
- Dalida, by Henry-Jean Servat and Orlando, Éditions Albin Michel, 2007. ISBN 2-226-15218-0 and ISBN 978-2-226-15218-3. (French)
- Dalida, tu m'appelais petite sœur…, by Jacqueline Pitchal, Éditions Carpentier Didier, 2007. ISBN 2-84167-504-1 and ISBN 978-2-84167-504-3. (French)
- Dalida: Une vie brûlée, by Bernard Pascuito, L'Archipel, 2007. ISBN 2-84187-955-0 and ISBN 978-2-84167-504-3. (French)
- Dalida: Une vie..., by Jacques Pessis, Célina Jauregui, Emmanuel Polle and N-T Binh, Édition Chronique, 2007. ISBN 2-205-06006-6 and ISBN 978-2-205-06006-5. (French)
- Dalida: Le temps d'aimer, Fabien Lecœuvre, Éditions City Editions, 2007. ISBN 2-35288-046-7 and ISBN 978-2-35288-046-2. (French)
- Luigi Tenco: Ed ora avrei mille cose da fare, by R. Tortarolo and G. Carozzi, Arcana, 2007. ISBN 88-7966-431-X and ISBN 978-88-7966-431-8. (Italian)
- Dalida: Ses fans, ses amis ont la parole, by Claire Nérac and Cédric Naïmi, Éditions du Rocher, 2008. ISBN 2-268-06580-4 and ISBN 978-2-268-06580-9. (French)
- Mia zia, ma tante Dalida, by Stéphane Julienne and Luigi Gigliotti, Éditions Ramsay, 2009. ISBN 2-8122-0011-1 and ISBN 978-2-8122-0011-3. (French)
- Dalida, le profil perdu, by Jean-Manuel Gabert, Éditions de la Belle Gabrielle, La légende de Montmartre collection, 2009. ISBN 2-917269-02-2 and ISBN 978-2-917269-02-2. (French)
- Pour Dalida, by Colette Fellous, Flammarion ed., 2010. ISBN 2-08-069056-6 and ISBN 978-2-08-069056-2. (French)
- Les grands interprètes, by Jacques Perciot, Frédéric Brun, Olympia Alberti, et Claude Frigara, Éditions Christian Pirot, 2010. ISBN 2-86808-274-2 and ISBN 978-2-86808-274-9. (French)
- Rencontres avec une Étoile, by Jean-Claude Genel, Éditions Entre deux mondes, 2010. ISBN 2-919537-00-8 and ISBN 978-2-919537-00-6. (French)
- La nuit de San Remo, by Philippe Brunel, Éditions Grasset, 2012. ISBN 2-246-75321-X and ISBN 978-2-246-75321-6. (French)
- Ciao amore. Tenco e Dalida, la notte di Sanremo, by Philippe Brunel, transl. by G. Vulpius, Rizzoli ed., 2012. ISBN 88-17-05518-2 and ISBN 978-88-17-05518-5. (Italian)
- C'était en mai, un samedi, by David Lelait-Helo, Éditions Anne Carrière, 2012. ISBN 2-84337-663-7 and ISBN 978-2-84337-663-4. (French)
- Internet websites: Hit-Parade France, Hit Parade Italia, Infodisc, Official Montmartre Tourist Information Authority, Dalida Official Website.
- ^ Dalida's Official Website, Biography. Retrieved 28 January 2010
- ^ Dalida Biography at RFI Musique. Retrieved 28 January 2010.
- ^ Dalida Official Website, Awards and Achievements. Retrieved 28 January 2010.
- ^ Dalida: Entre violon et amour, by Isaline, Éditions Publibook, 2002, p. 127. ISBN 2-7483-2629-6 and ISBN 978-2-7483-2629-1. Retrieved 28 January 2010.
- ^ Dalida Biography at RFI Musique. Retrieved 29 December 2009.
- ^ ↑ Daniel Lesueur, L'Argus Dalida, p. 27 ; Official Dalida Website.
- ^ "Dalida". New York Times. 5 May 1987. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B0DE1DD1230F936A35756C0A961948260. Retrieved 28 February 2008.
- ^ Simmonds, Jeremy (2008). v. Chicago Review Press. p. 225. ISBN 1-55652-754-3. http://books.google.ca/books?id=S3y7tocgPzgC.
- ^ "Les Cimetières de Montmartre (The Cemeteries of Montmartre)". Syndicat d'Initiative de Montmartre (Official Montmartre Tourist Information Authority). http://www.montmartre-guide.com/hi/histoire-et-lieux-celebres-de-montmartre/lang/en/page1/i10/les-cimetieres-de-montmartre.html. Retrieved 30 December 2009. [dead link]
- ^ "In the footsteps of Dalida in Montmartre". Syndicat d'Initiative de Montmartre (Official Montmartre Tourist Information Authority). http://www.montmartre-guide.com/hi/histoire-et-lieux-celebres-de-montmartre/lang/en/page1/i9/sur-les-pas-de-dalida-a-montmartre.html. Retrieved 30 December 2008. [dead link]
- ^ "In the footsteps of Dalida in Montmartre". Syndicat d'Initiative de Montmartre (Official Montmartre Tourist Information Authority). http://www.montmartre-guide.com/hi/histoire-et-lieux-celebres-de-montmartre/lang/en/page1/i9/sur-les-pas-de-dalida-a-montmartre.html. Retrieved 30 December 2009. [dead link]
- ^ Internet Movie Database article on Dalida television movie. Retrieved 28 January 2010.
- ^ a b c Dalida Official Website, Filmography. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Le Masque de Toutankhamon. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Sigara wa Kass. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Brigade des mœurs. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Rapt au deuxième bureau. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Che femmina... e che dollari!. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ L'inconnue de Hong Kong. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ La morale de l'histoire. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ 13 jours en France. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Menage all'italiana. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Io ti amo. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Comme sur des roulettes. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Le sixième jour. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Dalida: Le Film. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ a b (French) Dalida: Entre violon et amour, by Isaline, Éditions Publibook, 2002, p. 127. ISBN 2-7483-2629-6 and ISBN 978-2-7483-2629-1., retrieved 27 January 2010
- ^ Dalida Biography at RFI Musique, retrieved 27 January 2010
- ^ a b Dalida: Entre violon et amour, by Isaline, Éditions Publibook, 2002, p. 127. ISBN 2-7483-2629-6 and ISBN 978-2-7483-2629-1., retrieved 27 August 2010
- ^ Dalida: Entre violon et amour, by Isaline, Éditions Publibook, 2002, p. 127. ISBN 2-7483-2629-6 and ISBN 978-2-7483-2629-1., retrieved 27 January 2010
- ^ Monnaie de Paris' Website (French)
- ^ Dalida Biography at EVENE France (French)
- ^ "The Royal Variety Performance 1994 Part 1". The Bassey Blog. 6 October 2009. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ "Shirley Bassey: Born to Sing Forever & As If We Never Said Goodbye". GetaCD.org. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0296840/
- ^ "Sarah Hohn Featuring Wehrlen – 'Paroles, Paroles'". Discogs. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Soundtracks for 8 femmes. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Revival Dalida. Laurent Zabulon. L'Internaute. Benchmark Group. 18 March 2004. Retrieved 27 January 2010. (French)
- ^ "Star Academy 4". Ados.fr. Doctissimo Network. Retrieved 27 January 2010. (French)
- ^ "Vida tóxica". LaHiguera.net. Retrieved 27 January 2010. (Spanish)
- ^ "Luz Casal recibirá la medalla de las Artes y las Letras de Francia coincidiendo con el lanzamiento de su nuevo disco". La Voz de Galicia. Grupo Voz. 15 June 2009. Retrieved 27 January 2010. (Spanish)
- ^ "Patty Pravo e Dalida per la prima volta insieme: "E' uscito il nuovo album di Patty Pravo intitolato ' Spero che ti piaccia,' omaggio a Dalida". Emanuel Belardinelli. Agorà Magazine. Associazione Spazio Agorà. 19 November 2007. Retrieved 27 January 2010. (Italian)
- ^ "Michèle Torr prépare un Olympia pour 2008 et sort un nouvel album à la rentrée". SeniorActu. 6 July 2007. Retrieved 21 December 2010. (French)
- ^ "Lara Fabian Toutes les femmes en moi". Zikeo.com Le e-Magazine de Musique ! 9 May 2009. Retrieved 27 January 2010. (French)
- ^ Mädchen für die Mambo-Bar. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Série noire. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ La Triche. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Hors la vie. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Mina Tannenbaum. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Gazon maudit. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Pigalle. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Pédale douce. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Un Air de Famille. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ On connaît la chanson. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Mémoires d'immigrés, l'héritage maghrébin. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ A Soldier's Daughter Never Cries. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Novios. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Recto/Verso. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Tontaine et Tonton. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Un pont entre deux rives. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Souffle. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Mauvais genres. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Absolument fabuleux. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ C'est la vie. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Paroles de Bibs. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Dalida Official Website, Filmography. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ L'Adversaire. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Perduto Amor. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Dalida: TV mini-series. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Dalida: L'un reste, l'autre part. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ The Secret Life of Words. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ OSS 117, Le Caire nid d'espions. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Michou D'Auber. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ L'Ennemi intime. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Mesrine : L'Instinct de mort. IMDb. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ^ Heartbeats. IMDb. Retrieved 30 August 2010.
- ^ Las chicas de la 6ª planta. IMDb. Retrieved 23 March 2012.
- ^ Le Skylab. IMDb. Retrieved 23 March 2012.
- ^ "Musica e solitudini". La Repubblica. Gruppo Editoriale L’Espresso Spa. 7 May 1999. Retrieved 27 October 2010. (Italian)
- ^ "Dalida, Une Vie". Fugues. Éditions Nitram Inc./ Groupe Hom. 21 March 2003. Retrieved 27 January 2010. (French)
- ^ "Dalida, à quoi bon vivre au mois de mai ?" La Théâtrothèque. Retrieved 27 January 2010. (French)
- ^ Note a: Francaises, Francais, Madame Gigliotti vouz remercie pour votre choix. Mi liberale-socialiste. Elle espere que le nouveaux President de la Republique sera a la hauteur.
- Primary sources
- Dalida, mon amour, by Anne Gallimard and Orlando, Édition NRJ, 1989. ISBN 2-908070-01-4 and ISBN 978-2-908070-01-9. (French)
- Dalida mon amour, by Orlando, Hachette Littérature, 1991. ISBN 2-7382-0362-0 and ISBN 978-2-7382-0362-5. (French)
- Dalida, Histoire d’une femme, by Jean-François Josselin and Jeff Barnel, Jean-Claude Lattès, 1994. ISBN 2-7096-1450-2 and ISBN 978-2-7096-1450-4. (French)
- Dalida: Mon frère, tu écriras mes mémoires, by Catherine Rihoit, Plon, 1998. (French)
- Dalida, by Catherine Rihoit, Omnibus, 1998. ISBN 2-259-00083-5 and ISBN 978-2-259-00083-3. (French)
- Ciao, ciao bambina, by Henri-Jean Servat and Orlando, Éditions Albin Michel, 2003. ISBN 2-226-14298-3 and ISBN 978-2-226-14298-6. (French)
- Dalida, by Catherine Rihoit, Plon, re-published 2004. ISBN 2-259-20180-6 and ISBN 978-2-259-20180-3. (French)
- L’argus Dalida: Discographie mondiale et cotations, by Daniel Lesueur, Éditions Alternatives, 2004. ISBN 2-86227-428-3 and ISBN 978-2-86227-428-7. (French)
- Dalida: La femme de cœur, by Jeff Barnel, Éditions du Rocher, 2005. ISBN 2-268-05500-0 and ISBN 978-2-268-05500-8. (French)
- Dalida, by Henry-Jean Servat and Orlando, Éditions Albin Michel, 2007. ISBN 2-226-15218-0 and ISBN 978-2-226-15218-3. (French)
- Dalida, tu m'appelais petite sœur…, by Jacqueline Pitchal, Éditions Carpentier Didier, 2007. ISBN 2-84167-504-1 and ISBN 978-2-84167-504-3. (French)
- Mia zia, ma tante Dalida, by Stéphane Julienne and Luigi Gigliotti, Ramsay, 2009. ISBN 2-8122-0011-1 and ISBN 978-2-8122-0011-3. (French)
- Secondary sources
- Internet websites: Hit-Parade France, Hit Parade Italia, Infodisc, Official Montmartre Tourist Information Authority, Dalida Official Website.
- Le sixième jour, by Andrée Chedid, R. Julliard Ed., 1960, republished 1968 (Presses de la Cité), 1971 (Flammarion), 1976 (Le Livre de Poche), 1985 (Collection Castor poche), 1986 (Flammarion), 1989 (Éditions J'ai lu), 1992 (Flammarion) (Collection Vieux Fonds), ISBN 2-08-060557-7 and ISBN 978-2-08-060557-3, 1994 (Collection Librio), ISBN 2-08-060557-7 and ISBN 978-2-08-060557-3, 2003 (Flammarion) (Collection Librio), ISBN 2-290-33737-4 and ISBN 978-2-290-33737-0. (French)
- 50 ans de chanson française : de Trenet à Bruel, by Lucien Rioux, Éditions L'Archipel, 1992, republished 1994. ISBN 2-909241-68-8 and ISBN 978-2-909241-68-5. (French)
- L'Italia di Sanremo, by Gianni Borgna, Mondadori (Milano), 1998. ISBN 88-04-43638-7 and ISBN 978-88-04-43638-6. (Italian)
- La chanson française et francophone, by Pierre Saka and Yann Plougastel, Éditions Larousse, 1999. ISBN 2-03-511346-6 and ISBN 978-2-03-511346-7. (French)
- Hit-Parades, 1950–1998, by Daniel Lesueur, Éditions Alternatives et Parallèles, 1999. ISBN 2-86227-183-7 and ISBN 978-2-86227-183-5. (French)
- Merci les artistes !, by Maritie Carpentier and Gilbert Carpentier, Éditions Anne Carrière, 2001. ISBN 2-84337-148-1 and ISBN 978-2-84337-148-6. (French)
- Salut les Sixties, by Jean Peigné, Éditions de Fallois, 2003. ISBN 2-87706-471-9 and ISBN 978-2-87706-471-2. (French)
- Olympia. Bruno Coquatrix, 50 ans de Music-Hall, by Jean-Michel Boris, Jean-François Brieu and Eric Didi, Éditions Hors Collection, 2003. ISBN 2-258-06234-9 and ISBN 978-2-258-06234-4. (French)
- L'odyssée de la chanson française, by Gilles Verlant, Dominique Duforest and Christian Eudeline, Éditions Hors Collection, 2006. ISBN 2-258-07087-2 and ISBN 978-2-258-07087-5. (French)
- Le Roman de l'Olympia, by Pierre Philippe, Les Éditions du Toucan, 2009. ISBN 2-8100-0113-8 and ISBN 978-2-8100-0113-2. (French)
- Les Années 60: Rêves et Révolutions, by Frédéric Quinonero, Éditions D. Carpentier, 2009. ISBN 2-84167-653-6 and ISBN 978-2-84167-653-8. (French)
- Official
- Biographies
- Discography
- Filmography
- General
Dalida related articles
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Dalida
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Studio albums |
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Compilations |
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Remix albums |
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Live albums |
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Soundtracks |
- Pour toujours
- Dalida: Le Film
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Video compliations |
- Dalida: Éternelle
- Discofilm
- Dalida idéale
- Karaoké Dalida
- Dalida Pour Toujours
- Discofilm
- Dalida: Le Grand Voyage
- Dalida Passionnément
- Dalida: Une Vie
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Video singles |
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Live releases |
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Motion pictures |
- Joseph and His Brothers
- Le Masque de Toutankhamon
- Sigara wa Kass (A Glass and a Cigarette)
- Brigade des mœurs
- Rapt au deuxième bureau (aka Operation Abduction)
- Parlez-moi d'amour (aka "Che femmina... e che dollari!)
- L'inconnue de Hong Kong (aka Stranger from Hong-Kong)
- Menage all'italiana (aka Menage Italian Style)
- Io ti amo
- Comme sur des roulettes
- Le sixième jour (aka "The Sixth Day")
- Dalida: Le Film
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Documentaries |
- Dalida Pour Toujours
- Le Grand Voyage
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Related topics |
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Female artists |
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Male artists |
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Persondata |
Name |
Dalida |
Alternative names |
Gigliotti, Yolanda Christina |
Short description |
Singer, actress, beauty pageant titleholder |
Date of birth |
22 January 1933 |
Place of birth |
Cairo, Egypt |
Date of death |
5 May 1987 |
Place of death |
Paris, France |