LEGENDARY FRENCH SINGER, CHARLES AZNAVOUR DIES AT 94

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Legendary French singer, Charles AznavourĀ  who had predicted his own death aboutĀ  a week ago, had been reported dead on Monday.
The songwriter, who had just returned from a concert tour of Japan last month, passed away in his home in Alpilles in southeastern France. He had to cancel several shows last year after breaking his arm in a fall.
But as late as Friday the diminutive singer told French television that though his Swedish-born wife wanted him to stop touring, he would happily die on stage.
“I always go forwards,” said the performer who tried to write a song every day. “There is no backwards step with me.
“All I can do is live, and I live on stage. I am happy up there, and you can see that,” he added.
The singer had planned to go back on tour later this month, starting with a concert in Brussels on October 26.
Multilingual and a tireless traveller, Aznavour was named “Entertainer of the Century” by CNN in 1998 because of his immense global popularity.
In the English-speaking world he was often dubbed France’s Frank Sinatra, but unlike the American crooner, he wrote his own songs, often breaking taboos about marriage, homosexuality and men talking about their emotions.
Born Shahnour Varinag Aznavourian in Paris on May 22, 1924, to parents who had fled the genocide of ethnic Armenians as the Ottoman empire fell, Aznavour sold more than 180 million records in a career spanning eight decades and as many languages.
– Family of Resistance heroes –
His family were heroes of the Resistance against the Nazi occupation of France during World War II, regularly risking death to hide Communist partisans in their tiny Paris apartment.
Aznavour got his big break after the war when he opened for the then rising French star Edith Piaf.
She took him to America as her manager and songwriter while he worked on his voice, and urged him to get a nose job — advice he at first resisted.
He had his first number one hit in 1956 with “Sur Ma Vie” (In My Life). That was followed by one of his biggest hits, “Je M’voyais Deja” (It Will Be My Day).
But it was his leading role in Francois Truffaut’s film “Shoot the Piano Player” in 1960 that catapulted Aznavour to international fame.

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