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Au Revoir From Aznavour, Adventurer With Guts

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  • Au Revoir From Aznavour, Adventurer With Guts

    AU REVOIR FROM AZNAVOUR, ADVENTURER WITH GUTS
    By Jerry Tallmer

    The Villager, NY
    September 13 - 19, 2006

    It is to be wondered how many of the thousands who will pack Radio City
    Music Hall on the 18th and 19th of September 2006 to say au revoir
    to Charles Aznavour would have been at tiny Cafe Society Downtown in
    Greenwich Village to say bienvenue, comment ca va?, to the unknown
    23-year-old Aznavour 58 years ago this coming Christmas.

    Not very many.

    "When I came to America for the first time in my life," said Aznavour,
    the cherished-around-the-world singer/actor who ranks with French
    immortals Charles Trenet and Edith Piaf, "I performed at Cafe Society
    Downtown during Christmas '48 with my partner Pierre Roche. For only
    a few weeks," Aznavour said over the phone from Paris. "For Barney
    Josephson, yes?" - the combustible founder/owner of the historic
    race-free nightspot on Sheridan Square.

    "When I came back to America, Art D'Lugoff wanted me in his club [the
    Village Gate]. I told him I'm not the type for a club. In clubs, I'm
    lost," said the Aznavour whose enigmatic "Charlie Kohler" in Truffaut's
    1960 Tirez sur le pianiste (Shoot the Piano Player) - the astonishing
    film that truly introduced Aznavour to a great many Americans including
    this writer - was just such a club, but in Paris. "Eat and drink,"
    said Aznavour over the phone, in stoic summation of nightclub clatter.

    Not to mention the smoke? In those days?

    "Oh, the smoke doesn't bother me," said Aznavour.

    The two Radio City Music Hall concerts in September are way stations
    on what he says is his farewell tour.

    It isn't the first one that's been so termed, but now, he says,
    this is it.

    "For the first time I'm stepping back, because in a few years I
    will not be able to do the same show with enthusiasm and strength. I
    think it's fair while I am still strong to be honest with the public
    and myself.

    I told my management that we're going to do the countries according
    to language: America, England, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and so
    forth, and then all the others. Because I can't do what I did before,
    jumping from one language to another as fast as before, from English
    to Spanish to French" - and of course to Armenian, the language into
    which he was born.

    "Let's face it," said Charles Aznavour, "I'm 82. Not that I don't have
    the memory, but I've seen some performers who" - he let it trail off -
    "and I want to finish honorably and good."

    Charles Aznavourian (he dropped the "ian" early on) was born in Paris
    on May 22, 1924. He was almost born in America.

    "My parents" - Micha and Anar Aznavourian - "arrived in France after
    the Genocide" [of 1915, when the Turks forced- marched, starved, and
    slaughtered perhaps as many as a million Armenians]. "They applied for
    visas to the United States. There was of course a quota on Armenians
    and Greeks - ta ta ta, ta ta ta - 'Come back next year.' So my mother
    and father stayed in France.

    That's why I'm not American, and that's why I speak broken English
    but beautiful French!"

    Until the Depression hit, the Aznavourians ran a small Russian-Armenian
    restaurant in the rue de la Huchette, a hangout for actors and
    musicians. One biography says that Micha's father - Charles's
    grandfather - "had been a chef to Czar Nicholas II."

    Aznavour gave a laugh over the telephone. "My grandfather," he said,
    "was a chef for the governor of Tiflis, in Georgia. The czar used to
    eat there every 150 years."

    It was "a good family, my parents, my sister, and I, poor but not
    miserable" - one that found life and inspiration in "music, poetry,
    art, the things that make children grow up intellectually and happily."

    He himself was placed in a theater school in 1933, at age 9, and was
    on stage at age 13, in 1937, when a young man named Charles Trenet
    came around to present some songs he'd written.

    "That is how we met, and a year after, he took France by storm,
    as you say in America - the biggest star we ever had. It was the
    quality of his songs, the poetry of his songs" - and the romantic
    strength of that voice, those songs, on records and radio, even here,
    in Greenwich Village, USA, thanks to a girl or two one used to know,
    well before unknown Charles Aznavour made it into Cafe Society Downtown
    at Christmastime in '48.

    "The first time I heard Trenet's songs," said Aznavour now, "I said
    to myself: If this is what songwriting is, then it's what you have
    to do. I was in his entourage for several years, and we were very
    close friends all his life until he died [at 88, in 2001].

    At the end of his life I was his [music] publisher. I bought his
    catalogue. People are now working on it, putting it into a computer."

    And then there was Piaf.

    For whom Aznavour wrote one of the most famous of his incredible
    output of more than 700 songs, "Plus bleu que les yeux," which,
    when audiences called out for it, he would continue to sing in duet
    with her long after she left us in 1963. Among living ladies with
    whom he has teamed in concert are close friend Liza Minnelli and,
    somewhat incongrously, Pia Zadora, among others.

    "I met Piaf on a radio show in 1946. On the same night there I saw her
    and Trenet and Raoul Breton, a publisher of songs, only good songs,
    which is not true of many music publishers. I signed a contract
    with him.

    "I didn't work much with Piaf. I was much more her friend. That first
    time I came to America in 1948, it was with her. I was then in a duet
    [a two-man act] with Pierre Roche." As singer-songwriters, the team
    of Aznavour & Roche began to hit it big in the States and Canada.

    "But Piaf and Trenet told me I should sing alone, so I break up with
    my partner [who got married and stayed in Montreal]; no aggravation,
    no hard feelings." And Aznavour's star kept rising as he toured North
    Africa and then returned to Paris to acclaimed solo stands at the
    Alhambra and the Olympia.

    An aficionado of Trenet's used to come to Aznavour's shows. His name
    was Francois Truffaut, and at age 27 he had made one of the greatest
    of motion pictures, The 400 Blows. Now he came and introduced himself
    to Aznavour.

    "That was a good meeting. Two timid people deciding to make a
    movie. He said: 'I would like to make a documentary on you,' but
    when he came back a few weeks later he said: 'I've found a book,
    and the man in the book reminds me of you." The book was Down There,
    by the American writer David Goodis, and the man in the book was
    Charles Kohler, the pianist with a secret life and another name,
    Edouard Saroyan. An Armenian name, be it noted. It took five or six
    weeks to shoot the film in Paris and Grenoble.

    "It made my career in America, because until then, nobody in America
    knew who I was. A funny thing, careers. You can have a public without
    having a name.

    The first time I want to come to America [early 1963], my manager
    said there is no theater that wants you in New York. I said: So rent a
    theater. Carnegie Hall! It was during the strike of the newspapers. We
    sold 3,000 seats without advertisements. Jack Paar on the television
    talked with Geneviève about "somebody named Aznavour" but he didn't
    know who I was. I was ready to ruin myself" - to go broke, not just
    renting Carnegie Hall but flying 150 journalists over from Europe to
    cover the concert.

    "The beginning of a career is amazing. The coincidences are amazing. I
    have been lucky," said Charles Aznavour. "You must have the guts to
    be more than routine. You have to be adventurous."

    He has starred or otherwise participated throughout that career in
    no fewer than 60 motion pictures, long and short; has worked with
    directors from Truffaut to Volker Schlondorff's The Tin Drum, (1979)
    to Atom Egoyan's Ararat, (2002).

    That one, which put the Armenian Genocide under a burning glass -
    Egoyan is Canadian Armenian -"There are Armenians all over the world,"
    says Aznavour cozily - was, obviously, closest to the heart of the
    singer/actor who had flown to Armenia and raised millions for that
    doubly stricken country after the earthquake that killed 50,000 people
    and left 500,000 homeless in 1988.

    Aznavour has been married four times - "four marriages, four children,
    and four grandchildren." His daughter Katia will be on stage with
    him at Radio City. He is also - as "a very adventurous man" - had
    "ski accidents, horse accidents, car accidents." Three or four of
    the latter have been serious - "twice with Piaf, twice only me. Yes,
    in France - if you're going to have a car accident it is better to
    be in your own country. Two arms broke, but badly broke, from one of
    the ones when I was alone in the car. Six surgeries on each arm. In
    the other accident alone, I had nothing."

    Among his other works are a memoir, Les temps des avants (Flammarion),
    and the music and lyrics of a musical, Lautrec, which was done
    in London and in Germany, is awaiting production in Montreal, and
    might just come to the United States under the aegis of producer
    Mike Merrick.

    I'd love to see it, said I.

    "Me too!" said Aznavour, over there in Paris.

    I wonder if he'll go down to look at 1 Sheridan Square, where Cafe
    Society Downtown once was.

    Yesterday, when I was young ... when we were young ...

    when he was young ...

    CHARLES AZNAVOUR. September 18th and 19th at Radio City Music Hall,
    212-307-7171; radiocity.com.

    --Boundary_(ID_R7xLTaAre0/1s/9MFsr hdg)--
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