SO LONG, FAREWELL
By: Barbara & Scott Siegel
TheaterMania
Sep 13, 2006
Charles Aznavour
(© Jean-Baptiste Mondino)
When Charles Aznavour sings "Yesterday When I Was Young" at Radio City
Music Hall on September 18 and 19 in the last two concerts he will ever
give in New York City, the audience will likely be weeping. Aznavour,
who has nurtured a passionate fan base all over the world, is 82 years
old -- and though he is ready to say goodbye, those fans don't want
him to go.
Armenian by birth and French by attitude, this iconoclastic
songwriter/singer never succumbed to the entreaties of American record
executives who urged him to write simpler pop songs. His lyrics are
rich and colorful, and his music is vibrant, no matter if the song in
question is a melancholy ballad or a driving, up-tempo declaration of
life. The composer of nearly 1,000 songs, Aznavour will be hard-pressed
to choose among them for his final New York concerts; the audience
will want to hear so many more than he could possibly perform.
We recently called Aznavour in Paris and spoke with him about his
farewell tour. He was open and candid about what is sure to be a
memorable experience.
THEATERMANIA: How will you design your song list? Will it be different
than other shows because this is your farewell concert?
CHARLES AZNAVOUR: It's going to be what you call "The Best Of." I'm
going to sing what the public wants to hear. Why sing new songs? People
sing new songs when they have something to promote. I'm not promoting
anything. I'm just coming to say, "That's it."
TM: Are you still writing new songs?
CA: Yes, but I don't think the public wants to hear something new
when I'm coming for the last time.
TM: Do you realize the impact you've had on people's lives?
CA: It touches me very much. I'm very moved by that.
But the impact comes from the songs. The entertainer in me is less
happy than the writer in me.
TM: When you were last in New York, you spoke on stage about a musical
you were writing. Whatever became of that?
CA: Right now the producer is trying to find the money to present it
in Canada. It played in Germany and in Hungary. It has been translated
into English but it hasn't been done in France -- not yet. Meanwhile,
there's an American producer working on a show about the songs I've
done. The same thing is happening in other countries. I have the
funny feeling that I'm beginning to be "recognized." "Known" and
"recognized" are two different words. "Known" is people come to see
you as an entertainer; "recognized" comes from what I have written
and what I have done.
TM: Are you retiring because of your health?
CA: I feel well, but I don't know what condition I will be in in a
few years. I'm 82 and it's time to retire slowly but surely. What
I prefer to do is to write. I write every day of my life. I will
never be bored. When I end my performing career, I will write plays
and musicals.
TM: What happens after your New York concerts?
CA: I will go to a few more cities in America; then I will start my
farewell tour in Spanish. I will also go to Armenia and Japan. The
last shot will be in French.
A good farewell concert Tour should take four years, at least.
TM: Since the final concerts will be in French, will you come back
to North America to perform in Quebec?
CA: Yes, I will go back to the French part of Canada for the French
part of the tour. But I will not come back in English. English is
not the easiest for me.
TM: Edith Piaf sang "Non, je ne regrette rien." Do you have any
regrets?
CA: I have no regrets. I did more than what I ever dreamed I would do
in my life. I had a very difficult beginning -- very difficult. But
once I got going, I never went down after that. I've been blessed.
--Boundary_(ID_rQaRDqNQVAX4Jux8rM0uKw)--
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
By: Barbara & Scott Siegel
TheaterMania
Sep 13, 2006
Charles Aznavour
(© Jean-Baptiste Mondino)
When Charles Aznavour sings "Yesterday When I Was Young" at Radio City
Music Hall on September 18 and 19 in the last two concerts he will ever
give in New York City, the audience will likely be weeping. Aznavour,
who has nurtured a passionate fan base all over the world, is 82 years
old -- and though he is ready to say goodbye, those fans don't want
him to go.
Armenian by birth and French by attitude, this iconoclastic
songwriter/singer never succumbed to the entreaties of American record
executives who urged him to write simpler pop songs. His lyrics are
rich and colorful, and his music is vibrant, no matter if the song in
question is a melancholy ballad or a driving, up-tempo declaration of
life. The composer of nearly 1,000 songs, Aznavour will be hard-pressed
to choose among them for his final New York concerts; the audience
will want to hear so many more than he could possibly perform.
We recently called Aznavour in Paris and spoke with him about his
farewell tour. He was open and candid about what is sure to be a
memorable experience.
THEATERMANIA: How will you design your song list? Will it be different
than other shows because this is your farewell concert?
CHARLES AZNAVOUR: It's going to be what you call "The Best Of." I'm
going to sing what the public wants to hear. Why sing new songs? People
sing new songs when they have something to promote. I'm not promoting
anything. I'm just coming to say, "That's it."
TM: Are you still writing new songs?
CA: Yes, but I don't think the public wants to hear something new
when I'm coming for the last time.
TM: Do you realize the impact you've had on people's lives?
CA: It touches me very much. I'm very moved by that.
But the impact comes from the songs. The entertainer in me is less
happy than the writer in me.
TM: When you were last in New York, you spoke on stage about a musical
you were writing. Whatever became of that?
CA: Right now the producer is trying to find the money to present it
in Canada. It played in Germany and in Hungary. It has been translated
into English but it hasn't been done in France -- not yet. Meanwhile,
there's an American producer working on a show about the songs I've
done. The same thing is happening in other countries. I have the
funny feeling that I'm beginning to be "recognized." "Known" and
"recognized" are two different words. "Known" is people come to see
you as an entertainer; "recognized" comes from what I have written
and what I have done.
TM: Are you retiring because of your health?
CA: I feel well, but I don't know what condition I will be in in a
few years. I'm 82 and it's time to retire slowly but surely. What
I prefer to do is to write. I write every day of my life. I will
never be bored. When I end my performing career, I will write plays
and musicals.
TM: What happens after your New York concerts?
CA: I will go to a few more cities in America; then I will start my
farewell tour in Spanish. I will also go to Armenia and Japan. The
last shot will be in French.
A good farewell concert Tour should take four years, at least.
TM: Since the final concerts will be in French, will you come back
to North America to perform in Quebec?
CA: Yes, I will go back to the French part of Canada for the French
part of the tour. But I will not come back in English. English is
not the easiest for me.
TM: Edith Piaf sang "Non, je ne regrette rien." Do you have any
regrets?
CA: I have no regrets. I did more than what I ever dreamed I would do
in my life. I had a very difficult beginning -- very difficult. But
once I got going, I never went down after that. I've been blessed.
--Boundary_(ID_rQaRDqNQVAX4Jux8rM0uKw)--
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress