Aznavour wrote his will 30 years ago to avoid ‘family disputes’

Panorama, Armenia
Oct 5 2018

Great French-Armenian singer Charles Aznavour, who passed away on Monday at 94, wrote his will still 30 years ago to avoid disagreements within his family and court disputes, Le Figaro French newspaper reports.  

At the Sept à Huit program on 16 September this year, Aznavour said ‘everything is already planned.’

“It is already 30 years that I have created my will. I don’t want them to argue for a spoon or fork. This is ridiculous, but this is sometimes the case,” the legendary singer said.

He leaves behind a fortune worth €145 million, the newspaper said.  

Aznavour was married three times – to Michelle Rugel in 1946, Evelyn Plessis in 1956 and his widow Ulla Thorsell in 1967 – and had six children – Séda, Charles, Patrick, Katia, Mischa, and Nicolas.

France paid a national tribute to the star on Friday in a special ceremony held in the courtyard of Les Invalides, a complex of buildings and monuments related to French military history, in attendance of the top French and Armenian leadership.

His funeral ceremony will take place on Saturday, 6 October.     

Armenia team eager to compete in Youth Olympics

MediaMax, Armenia
Oct 5 2018
 
 
Armenia team eager to compete in Youth Olympics
 
  
 
Armenia team is already in Buenos Aires, where 2018 Youth Olympic Games will kick off on October 7.
 
The team has told Mediamax Sport they are settled in the village and looking forward to the opening ceremony.
 
 
“The kids are very excited, they can’t wait for the games to start, and they are all eager to perform. Everything is the same as for the senior Olympics,” said head coach of the youth weightlifting team, bronze medalist of 2008 Beijing Olympics Gevorg Davtyan.
 
European champion Sahak Hovhannisyan is ready for his first Olympics. “All is great in Buenos Aires. We have settled comfortably, and we are all ready to win medals. The mood is excellent in the team,” he said.
 
Armenia will be represented by 8 athletes in Youth Olympics: weightlifters Karen Margaryan (77kg) and Liana Gyurjyan (63kg), Greco-Roman style wrestler Sahak Hovhanniyan (60kg), shooter Hayk Babayan (pistol), taekwondo athlete Andranik Khachatryan (73kg), swimmer Artur Barseghyan (50m, 100m freestyle and 50m butterfly), artistic gymnast Yulia Vodoplyasova and judoka Yuri Israelyan (55kg).

Tucuman Province of Argentina passes resolution recognizing Armenian Genocide

News.am, Armenia
Oct 5 2018
Tucuman Province of Argentina passes resolution recognizing Armenian Genocide Tucuman Province of Argentina passes resolution recognizing Armenian Genocide

13:41, 05.10.2018
                  

The Legislature of the Province of Tucuman, Argentina, passed a resolution of recognition of the Armenian Genocide by approving today a project of adhesion to the National Law 26,199 that declares April 24 of every year as the “Day of Action for Tolerance and Respect between Peoples” in commemoration of the Armenian Genocide.

“In Argentina, the agenda for the defense of human rights has a point dedicated to the Armenian Genocide, which is why the adhesion of the provinces is not only an act of accompaniment to the community, but the ratification of the commitment to this chapter of the human tragedies of the early twentieth century, which is closely linked to those that occurred later. This significant step of Tucuman, a province with little community presence, goes in that direction,” said Nicolas Sabuncuyan, director of the Armenian National Committee of Argentina.

The project was presented by Legislators Osvaldo Morelli, Irene Medina, Sandra Mendoza and Sara Assan. The Legislator Silvia Rojkes presented a similar project previously. With this project, Tucuman will become the 21st province to recognize the Armenian Genocide when the promulgation of the legislation by Governor Juan Luis Manzur is completed.

On January 11, 2007, the Argentine State promulgated National Law 26,199, which establishes that on April 24 of each year it will be remembered as the “Day of Action for Tolerance and Respect between Peoples” in memory of the Armenian Genocide, with an article that invites the provinces to adhere to it. The provinces that already joined the National Law are Buenos Aires, Catamarca, Chaco, Chubut, Córdoba, Corrientes, Entre Rios, Jujuy, La Pampa, La Rioja, Mendoza, Misiones, Neuquen, Rio Negro , Salta, San Luis, San Juan, Santa Cruz, Santa Fe, Tucuman and Tierra del Fuego, along with the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires. The provinces of Santiago del Estero and Formosa still did not adhere to national recognition.

Macron: Aznavour was the son, the ambassador, the friend of Armenia

News.am, Armenia
Oct 5 2018
Macron: Aznavour was the son, the ambassador, the friend of Armenia Macron: Aznavour was the son, the ambassador, the friend of Armenia

14:15, 05.10.2018
                  

Charles Aznavour was the son, the ambassador, the friend of Armenia, and the 1988 earthquake marked the beginning of his commitment to Armenia, President of France Emmanuel Macron said during the homage to Aznavour in Paris on Friday.

“He sang as if his life depended on it. He knew the tragedy of history and he was also familiar with hope. He gave a voice to those who have been silenced,” Macron said.

The French leader emphasized that through Charles Aznavour today we have an opportunity to remember “what we owe as a nation to all those Armenians fleeing their homeland and coming to  grow ours”.

“His songs were never just a summer hit, they were a soothing balm. He was a narrator of his times who took upon himself the pains of the day and bore it for us,” Macron said.

He added that “some of heroes become heroes with their blood, others with their use of and love for the language”, and the source of Charles Aznavour’s poetry was the French language.

“The poet makes the hard work of living easier. In France, poets never die. Long live the [French] Republic,” he concluded.

France Pays Tribute to Charles Aznavour With Memorial Ceremony

Hollywood Reporter
Oct 5 2018


Marc Piasecki/Getty Images

France paid tribute to Charles Aznavour on Friday in a solemn and subdued ceremony that contrasted sharply with the singer’s joyful character.

One of France’s most famous personalities, Aznavour died earlier this week at 94.

On a mild, sunny morning in Paris, politicians and celebrities gathered near the site of Napoleon’s tomb in the courtyard of Les Invalides, where French president Emmanuel Macron welcomed Armenia Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. Former French Presidents Nicolas Sarkozy and Francois Hollande and actor Jean-Paul Belmondo were among those attending the ceremony.

Aznavour, born to Armenian parents who fled to Paris in the 1920s, became one of the Armenian diaspora’s most recognized voices and a vocal defender during a performing career spanning eight decades.

Covered by a French tricolor flag, Aznavour’s coffin arrived in the courtyard carried by military personal to the sound of a traditional Armenian tune. A spray of red, blue and orange flowers — the colors of the Armenian flag — was then laid close to the casket.

“Every Armenian sees him as a close relative,” Pashinyan said. “Because Aznavour is the one who lifted Armenia to the roof of the world.”

Born Shanoun Varenagh Aznavourian, the singer cut the Armenian suffix from his stage name but never forgot his Armenian roots.

He founded Aznavour and Armenia, a nonprofit organization created after the devastating earthquake that hit Soviet Armenia in 1988. His movie credits include Atom Egoyan’s Ararat (2002), a film that dealt with the 1915 massacres of up to 1.5 million Armenians under the Ottoman Empire.

Aznavour campaigned internationally to get the killings formally deemed a genocide.

Speaking after Pashinyan, Macron said that “for so many decades, [Aznavour] has made our life sweeter, our tears less bitter.”

“His songs were for millions of people, a balm, a remedy, a comfort,” Macron said, praising Aznavour for the quality of his lyrics and the promotion of France.

“French language is not only the cement of a nation, it’s also the catalyst for freedom and hope,” said Macron, who compared Aznavour to French poet Guillaume Apollinaire.

The ceremony ended with a rendition of Aznavour’s hit “Emmenez-Moi,” which was played as his coffin was carried away.

Aznavour started his career as a songwriter for French chanteuse Edith Piaf, who took him under her wing. Like her, his fame ultimately reached well outside France. The crooner often compared to Frank Sinatra sold more than 180 million records and was one of France’s most recognized faces abroad.

He sang to sold-out concert halls until the end and wrote more than 1,000 songs, including the classics “La Boheme” and “She.” A love ballad, “She” topped British charts for four weeks in 1974 and was covered by Elvis Costello for the film Notting Hill.

Friday’s ceremony in Paris marked the second time in a year that France paid tribute to one of its musical icons after hundreds of thousands gathered on the Champs Elysees in December to mourn the death of Johnny Hallyday.

France farewells singer Charles Aznavour

The West Australian
Oct 5 2018
Brian LoveAAP

Friday, 5 October 2018 12:12PM

France has said goodbye to Charles Aznavour, demonstrating the late singer’s status as a national icon at a farewell attended by President Emmanuel Macron, his two predecessors and the leader of Armenia, the country of Aznavour’s roots.

Celebrities, among them the now-frail actor Jean-Paul Belmondo, attended the ceremony on Friday under clear blue Paris skies for the singer-songwriter who died this week at 94.

Pallbearers carried Aznavour’s Tricolour-draped coffin into the courtyard at the Les Invalides military museum where Napoleon is buried in the heart of the French capital.

Aznavour, whose global reach was enhanced by his ability to sing in half a dozen languages, died at his villa in the village of Mouries, in the southern French Alpilles region, on Sunday night.

Aznavour, born in Paris on May 22, 1924, to Armenian parents – his birth name Shahnour Aznavourian – grew up on the Left Bank of Paris and began performing at the age of nine.

His first public performances were at Armenian gatherings where his father and older sister Aida sang while he danced.

He broke from the shadows penning songs for Edith Piaf in the years after World War 2, and later brought rapt audiences to their feet at venues as far away as New York’s Carnegie Hall.

Macron, due to go on an official visit next week to Armenia that Aznavour had hoped to attend, stood side-by-side with Armenia’s leaders for a ceremony that began with an army band rendition of Armenia’s national anthem, then France’s.

France pays tribute to late singer Charles Aznavour

Associated Press
Oct 5 2018

PARIS (AP) — France paid tribute to Charles Aznavour on Friday in a solemn and subdued ceremony that contrasted sharply with the singer’s joyful character.

One of France’s most famous personalities, Aznavour died earlier this week at 94.

On a mild, sunny morning in Paris, politicians and celebrities gathered near the site of Napoleon’s tomb in the courtyard of Les Invalides, where French president Emmanuel Macron welcomed Armenia Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. Former French Presidents Nicolas Sarkozy and Francois Hollande and actor Jean-Paul Belmondo were among those attending the ceremony.

Aznavour, born to Armenian parents who fled to Paris in the 1920s, became one of the Armenian diaspora’s most recognized voices and a vocal defender during a performing career spanning eight decades.

Covered by a French tricolor flag, Aznavour’s coffin arrived in the courtyard carried by military personal to the sound of a traditional Armenian tune. A spray of red, blue and orange flowers — the colors of the Armenian flag — was then laid close to the casket.

“Every Armenian sees him as a close relative,” Pashinyan said. “Because Aznavour is the one who lifted Armenia to the roof of the world.”

Born Shanoun Varenagh Aznavourian, the singer cut the Armenian suffix from his stage name but never forgot his Armenian roots.

He founded Aznavour and Armenia, a nonprofit organization created after the devastating earthquake that hit Soviet Armenia in 1988. His movie credits include Atom Egoyan’s 2002 “Ararat,” a film that dealt with the 1915 massacres of up to 1.5 million Armenians under the Ottoman Empire.

Aznavour campaigned internationally to get the killings formally deemed a genocide.

Speaking after Pashinyan, Macron said that “for so many decades, (Aznavour) has made our life sweeter, our tears less bitter.”

“His songs were for millions of people, a balm, a remedy, a comfort,” Macron said, praising Aznavour for the quality of his lyrics and the promotion of France.

“French language is not only the cement of a nation, it’s also the catalyst for freedom and hope,” said Macron, who compared Aznavour to French poet Guillaume Apollinaire.

The ceremony ended with a rendition of Aznavour’s hit “Emmenez-Moi,” which was played as his coffin was carried away.

Aznavour started his career as a songwriter for French chanteuse Edith Piaf, who took him under her wing. Like her, his fame ultimately reached well outside France. The crooner often compared to Frank Sinatra sold more than 180 million records and was one of France’s most recognized faces abroad.

He sang to sold-out concert halls until the end and wrote more than 1,000 songs, including the classics “La Boheme” and “She.” A love ballad, “She” topped British charts for four weeks in 1974 and was covered by Elvis Costello for the film “Notting Hill.”

Friday’s ceremony in Paris marked the second time in a year that France paid tribute to one of its musical icons after hundreds of thousands gathered on the Champs Elysees in December to mourn the death of Johnny Hallyday.

How Charles Aznavour changed music forever

France 24
Oct 5 2018

    © AFP | Charles Aznavour reinvented popular music one cold December night in Paris in 1960

    PARIS (AFP) – 

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    Charles Aznavour reinvented popular music one cold December night in Paris in 1960.

    “He just blew my brains out,” said Bob Dylan of the first time he witnessed the French singer’s style of delivery a little over two years later.

    That concert has since gone down as one of the greatest ever at New York’s Carnegie Hall.

    Yet that night in Paris when a nervy Aznavour — who died Monday aged 94 — stepped out on stage to change the way songs were sung forever, his career was on the skids.

    Unloved at home and utterly unknown abroad, he was at the end of his tether.

    He had pulled out all the stops to fill the Alhambra concert hall in one final bid to win over the public.

    But the critics had come to bury not to praise him.

    The little Armenian who had written songs for Edith Piaf, and spent years as her bag carrier, was going nowhere, stuck as the “ugly duckling” of the cabaret circuit without any kind of hit for four years.

    Yet it was — irony of ironies — a song he wrote about a desperate provincial crooner dreaming of fame, “Je m’voyais deja” (It Will Be My Day), that finally launched Aznavour to stardom.

    Yves Montand, the actor and singer, had earlier turned it down, saying “songs about show business never work”.

    But that night at the Alhambra, Aznavour did not just sing the song, he turned it into “a one-act play” about the poor crooner’s life, acting out him dressing to go on stage.

    – ‘He was revolutionary’ –

    And with the song’s last prophetic line, “But a day will come/ When I will show them I have the talent”, Aznavour brought the house down.

    The man who begun performing at five finally found his mojo at 36.

    His biographer Bertrand Dicale said “Aznavour was a revolutionary. He changed everything: the way songs were written, the themes a song could tackle, the way they could be performed.”

    Never good-looking — Piaf badgered him to get a nose job, then told him it was horrible — he was by then balding and prematurely aged.

    But even as doors closed in his face, he was rebuilding himself from the best of his heroes. “My four points of reference were “Edith Piaf, Charles Trenet, (the Russian acting guru) Konstantin Stanislavski and Maurice Chevalier,” he told AFP last year, adding that Bing Crosby, Mel Torme and Frank Sinatra were also in the mix.

    “He stole his famous bar stool routine from Sinatra,” said Dicale. “And that way he had of telling stories between songs was inspired by Sinatra’s Las Vegas shows.”

    “I had done classical dance, variety and theatre, and I wanted to get all that into my performances,” Aznavour, who will be buried on Saturday, told AFP.

    – ‘He put his guts into it’ –

    “I said to myself that if I put them all in I would find my own style. And I did, it became ‘Aznavour’,” said the singer born Shahnour Varinag Aznavourian to parents fleeing the massacres of Armenians as the Ottoman empire collapsed.

    “He broke all the rules of his era when singers had to be really good looking,” said the French songwriter Calogero. “But he had this incredible personality.”

    For the rapper MC Solaar “you can see the feeling with Aznavour. He wanted to move people, we are far beyond just singing with him,” he added.

    Dicale added that Aznavour really became the characters in the songs, “really putting his guts into it”.

    That is what impressed his peers, the writer said, and what won him the hearts of audiences across the world.

    “Just seeing what he did on stage at his age gives me the courage to continue,” said the rapper Soprano, one of several hip-hop stars including Dr Dre and Sean Paul who have covered or sampled Aznavour.

    “Lots of singers have a bit of Aznavour in them,” said Dicale, from “Brazilians like Caetano Veloso and Chico Buarque to… Elton John and Sting who at 19 or 20 discovered Aznavour” and have never ceased to be fans.

    Jonathan Lacôte: Charles Aznavour helped France to never forget Armenia

    News.am, Armenia
    Oct 5 2018
    Jonathan Lacôte: Charles Aznavour helped France to never forget Armenia Jonathan Lacôte: Charles Aznavour helped France to never forget Armenia

    15:09, 05.10.2018
                      

    Since Monday France and Armenia are like one people united in commemoration of the legacy of Charles Aznavour, French ambassador to Armenia Jonathan Lacôte said at the Charles Aznavour square in Yerevan. 

    “This is very symbolic that all ceremonies held in Paris are broadcasted in the streets of Yerevan at the same time when his songs are broadcasted on Republic Square,” the ambassador said.

    Aznavour is an incarnation of relations between France and Armenia, and he helped France to never forget Armenia even before Armenia became independent again, the diplomat emphasized.

    Lacôte added that Aznavour was present during the painful hours of Armenia, including in 1988 after the earthquake in Spitak.

    “He was very dedicated to Armenia. At the same time Armenia can be very proud to have offered France one of the greatest Frenchmen of the century, one of the greatest ambassadors of the French language, one of the greatest artists we had. As Aznavour said himself he was 100% French and 100% Armenian, and I think that is why we are all united today for this ceremony,” he concluded.

    Food prices in Armenia up 1.2% in September

    ARKA, Armenia
    Oct 5 2018

    YEREVAN, October 5. /ARKA/. Prices for foods and soft drinks rose 1.2% in Armenia in September 2018, compared with the previous month, the National Statistical Committee reports. 

    According to the committee, the growth was mainly due to the increase in prices for vegetables, meat and milk – 2.2%, 2.3% and 4.9% respectively. 

    Vegetables rose 19.2% in September 2018, compared with the same month a year earlier, and 2.2%, compared with August 2018.  

    Fruit prices have grown 0.4% over one year and 6.1% over one month. 

    Meat products rose 10.8% and 2.3% respectively and dairy products, cheese and eggs 4.5% and 4.9%, while sugar became 15.4% and 0.7% cheaper. -0—