[ vedette ] Johnny HALLYDAY
+7
old timer
JO
Horace Pinker
cyberpunk
Tom Betts
Personne
Edocle
11 participants
Page 1 sur 1
[ vedette ] Johnny HALLYDAY
rôle de HUD dans le Spécialiste de Corbucci
Mais ausssi dans "D'où viens-tu Johnny ?"
_________________
Edocle- Sergio Leone
- Messages : 3743
Date d'inscription : 06/04/2010
Age : 78
Localisation : 92 Spaghetti Ville
Personne- Sergio Leone
- Messages : 7054
Date d'inscription : 06/04/2010
Age : 56
Localisation : Lone Pine, CA
Re: [ vedette ] Johnny HALLYDAY
Ma VHS d'époque ! Usée jusqu'à la corde !
Mais conservée précieusement, je l'avais emporté lors d'un concert,
mais la dédicace ne fût pas possible ! Trop de fanatisme limite violence !
_________________
Edocle- Sergio Leone
- Messages : 3743
Date d'inscription : 06/04/2010
Age : 78
Localisation : 92 Spaghetti Ville
Re: [ vedette ] Johnny HALLYDAY
HALLYDAY, Johnny (Jean-Philippe Léo Smet) [6/15/1943, Paris, Île-de-France, France - ] - composer, singer, TV actor, married to actresses Sylvie Vartan [1944- ] (1965-1980), Elisabeth Etienne [1957- ] (1981-1982), Adeline Blondeau [1971- ] (1990-1992) (1994-1995), Laeticia Boudou Hallyday [1975- ] (1996- ), father of actress Laura Smet [1983- ], actor, singer David Hallyday [1966- ]
Drop Them or I’ll Shoot - 1968 (Hud Dixon/Brett/Brad)
Drop Them or I’ll Shoot - 1968 (Hud Dixon/Brett/Brad)
Tom Betts- Enzo G. Castellari
- Messages : 339
Date d'inscription : 06/11/2010
Personne- Sergio Leone
- Messages : 7054
Date d'inscription : 06/04/2010
Age : 56
Localisation : Lone Pine, CA
cyberpunk- Sergio Leone
- Messages : 2979
Date d'inscription : 15/04/2010
Age : 58
Re: [ vedette ] Johnny HALLYDAY
Dans point de chute de Robert Hossein.
J'ai le dvd depuis un moment mais pas encore vu...
J'ai le dvd depuis un moment mais pas encore vu...
Horace Pinker- Michele Lupo
- Messages : 545
Date d'inscription : 15/11/2010
Age : 47
Localisation : Seine et marne
Re: [ vedette ] Johnny HALLYDAY
Sur le tournage du Spécialiste, ici :
http://monnomestpersonne1973.blogspot.fr/2013/01/le-specialiste-1969.html
http://monnomestpersonne1973.blogspot.fr/2013/01/le-specialiste-1969.html
JO- Sergio Leone
- Messages : 4203
Date d'inscription : 10/05/2010
Re: [ vedette ] Johnny HALLYDAY
Il nous a quittés cette nuit, nul ne peut l'ignorer ce matin, tous les médias en parlent.
Le chanteur est plus célébré que l'acteur, normal. D'ailleurs peu de ses films ont vraiment marqué les mémoires. Peut-être le dernier, avec Luchini ? Mais ici il reste toujours "le spécialiste" !
Le chanteur est plus célébré que l'acteur, normal. D'ailleurs peu de ses films ont vraiment marqué les mémoires. Peut-être le dernier, avec Luchini ? Mais ici il reste toujours "le spécialiste" !
old timer- Sergio Leone
- Messages : 1889
Date d'inscription : 20/05/2010
Re: [ vedette ] Johnny HALLYDAY
J'étais vraiment pas fan mais dans VENGEANCE de Johnnie To, il est hallucinant, on oublie complètement le chanteur et le personnage médiatique.
là dans une scène très hitchcockienne :
là dans une scène très hitchcockienne :
cyberpunk- Sergio Leone
- Messages : 2979
Date d'inscription : 15/04/2010
Age : 58
Re: [ vedette ] Johnny HALLYDAY
Dans "Le spécialiste"
Salut l'artiste. RIP.
Salut l'artiste. RIP.
Sitting Bull- Sergio Leone
- Messages : 1145
Date d'inscription : 05/10/2010
Age : 87
Localisation : La forêt landaise
Re: [ vedette ] Johnny HALLYDAY
R.I.P.
_________________
Dis-donc, toi, tu sais que tu as la tête de quelqu’un qui vaut 2000 dollars?
Rex Lee- Sergio Leone
- Messages : 6429
Date d'inscription : 06/04/2010
Age : 68
Localisation : 19
Re: [ vedette ] Johnny HALLYDAY
Comme Cyberpunk pas spécialement fan mais c'est un grand bonhomme qui nous quitte. Qu'il repose en paix avec ces amis rockers.
_________________
Mieux vos être mort et cool que mort et pas cool (Mickey Rourke dans Harley Davidson & l'homme aux santiags)
Trinita- Sergio Leone
- Messages : 6641
Date d'inscription : 06/04/2010
Age : 41
Localisation : Angers
Re: [ vedette ] Johnny HALLYDAY
Une musique "western", en souvenir.
Sitting Bull- Sergio Leone
- Messages : 1145
Date d'inscription : 05/10/2010
Age : 87
Localisation : La forêt landaise
Re: [ vedette ] Johnny HALLYDAY
Dernier hommage.
Sitting Bull- Sergio Leone
- Messages : 1145
Date d'inscription : 05/10/2010
Age : 87
Localisation : La forêt landaise
Edocle- Sergio Leone
- Messages : 3743
Date d'inscription : 06/04/2010
Age : 78
Localisation : 92 Spaghetti Ville
Re: [ vedette ] Johnny HALLYDAY
Voici une interview de Johnny qui nous parle du spécialiste mais avant il nous dit que "Point de chute" était un projet de Sergio Leone mais qu'il l'a finalement refilé à Robert Hossein.
La vidéo plus complète ici
Horace Pinker- Michele Lupo
- Messages : 545
Date d'inscription : 15/11/2010
Age : 47
Localisation : Seine et marne
Re: [ vedette ] Johnny HALLYDAY
Merci pour le lien Horace Pinker!Horace Pinker a écrit:
Voici une interview de Johnny qui nous parle du spécialiste mais avant il nous dit que "Point de chute" était un projet de Sergio Leone mais qu'il l'a finalement refilé à Robert Hossein.
La vidéo plus complète ici
Moi qui connaissais peu la carrière de Hallyday; ce fut fort instructif.
Re: [ vedette ] Johnny HALLYDAY
Une sympathique et culte lapalissade
cyberpunk- Sergio Leone
- Messages : 2979
Date d'inscription : 15/04/2010
Age : 58
Johnny Hallyday (1943-2017)
https://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-johnny-hallyday-snap-story.html
Johnny Hallyday, Gallic rocker worshiped as the ‘French Elvis,’ dies at 74
Los Angeles Times
BY DENNIS MCLELLAN
DEC. 6, 2017
Johnny Hallyday, the French rock star who came to fame in the early 1960s with cover versions of American rock ’n’ roll hits and continued to sell out concerts in France for decades, has died at his home outside Paris. He was 74.
Hallyday, who often was called “the French Elvis,” died Wednesday, French President Emmanuel Macron announced in a statement. Fans — many in tears or carrying flowers — gathered outside his home to honor the rocker.
Macron said Hallyday “brought a part of America into our national pantheon.” Hallyday, he said, seemed nearly invincible and long ago had been christened a “French hero.”
Although many Americans had never heard of Hallyday, he was considered a godlike figure in France, where a survey once indicated he could likely get enough votes to be elected president.
“Hearing about Johnny’s death has hurt us because Johnny is our God and nobody can replace him,” one fan, Yves Buisson, told the Associated Press outside the Hallyday family’s gated home in Marnes-La-Coquette. His arms were covered with tattoos of the star.
In 1997, French President Jacques Chirac presented Hallyday with the Legion of Honor.
The Elvis-inspired rocker scored early hits with French cover versions of U.S. records such as “Be-Bop-A-Lula,” “Blue Suede Shoes,” “Whole Lot of Shakin’ Going On” and “Long Tall Sally.”
His 1961 version of Chubby Checker’s “Let’s Twist Again” sold 1 million copies, and his early appearances in France caused riots.
“Johnny Hallyday introduced American rock ’n’ roll to a vast French-speaking audience around the world,” Howard Kramer, curatorial director at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum, told The Times.
“He had a great reputation as a live performer, and he made records that were massively popular. He never really broke out of Europe, but his success was so massive he didn’t really need to.”
Over the decades, Hallyday reportedly sold more than 100 million records and performed before more than 15 million people in concert. In 1966, he selected Jimi Hendrix as an opening act and used eventual Led Zeppelin founder Jimmy Page in the recording studio as a session guitarist.
“Johnny is our god. We live and breathe him,” a man in his 60s told the Times of London in 2009 when Hallyday launched a six-month sold-out farewell conceHallyday, who in recent years had split his time between Paris and Los Angeles, said at the time that he planned to continue recording occasionally. But he said decades on the road had worn him down. He had lung cancer and had repeated health scares over the years, including undergoing back surgery at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.
“I have had enough playing Johnny Hallyday,” the Times of London reported him as saying a week before the 2009 tour. “I want more and more to be Jean-Philippe Smet.”
The son of a Belgian father and a French mother, he was born Jean-Philippe Smet in Paris on June 15, 1943.
His vagabond father, who performed in cabarets and theaters, soon left, and his mother became a model to earn money.
Hallyday was raised by his paternal aunt, who had acted in silent films and had two daughters who became dancers. As a child, he lived with his aunt and cousins in London for several years and traveled with them when they performed in Belgium, Germany and Portugal before returning to Paris.
He also made his film debut as a child — an uncredited walk-on in Henri-Georges Clouzot’s 1955 thriller “Diabolique.”
As a teenager, Hallyday idolized Marlon Brando, Montgomery Clift and James Dean, and his favorite movies were “East of Eden,” “On the Waterfront” and “The Wild One.”
“I adored all that period in the history of cinema — everything that spilled forth from the Actors Studio,” he told Fort Lauderdale’s Sun-Sentinel in 2003. “I actually wanted to be an actor before I became a singer. But when I was 12, I discovered rock ’n’ roll through Elvis Presley.” At 17, he recalled, “I was playing a ballroom gig one Sunday to get some money to pay for my acting classes when a producer heard me and asked me to do a record. I did it, and it all just happened from there.”
Hallyday began appearing in French movies after he gained rock ’n’ roll fame, but he primarily played singers.
“It wasn’t what I wanted to do,” he told the New York Times in 2003. “I wanted to separate the singer from the actor. So I stopped for several years and then started to work again with [directors] Costa-Gavras, Jean-Luc Godard — roles where I wasn’t a singer at all.”
Hallyday received critical acclaim for his role as a bank robber in director Patrice Leconte’s “Man on the Train.”
“He’s the equivalent of Joan of Arc in France,” late actor Jean Rochefort, who co-starred in the film, once told the New York Times. “For me, he isn’t really an actor but a man who has a presence, an undeniable charisma.”
Hallyday, who had several marriages, including to French singing star Sylvie Vartan, is survived by his wife, Laeticia; and four children, Jade, Joy, Laura Smet and Dave.
Johnny Hallyday, Gallic rocker worshiped as the ‘French Elvis,’ dies at 74
Los Angeles Times
BY DENNIS MCLELLAN
DEC. 6, 2017
Johnny Hallyday, the French rock star who came to fame in the early 1960s with cover versions of American rock ’n’ roll hits and continued to sell out concerts in France for decades, has died at his home outside Paris. He was 74.
Hallyday, who often was called “the French Elvis,” died Wednesday, French President Emmanuel Macron announced in a statement. Fans — many in tears or carrying flowers — gathered outside his home to honor the rocker.
Macron said Hallyday “brought a part of America into our national pantheon.” Hallyday, he said, seemed nearly invincible and long ago had been christened a “French hero.”
Although many Americans had never heard of Hallyday, he was considered a godlike figure in France, where a survey once indicated he could likely get enough votes to be elected president.
“Hearing about Johnny’s death has hurt us because Johnny is our God and nobody can replace him,” one fan, Yves Buisson, told the Associated Press outside the Hallyday family’s gated home in Marnes-La-Coquette. His arms were covered with tattoos of the star.
In 1997, French President Jacques Chirac presented Hallyday with the Legion of Honor.
The Elvis-inspired rocker scored early hits with French cover versions of U.S. records such as “Be-Bop-A-Lula,” “Blue Suede Shoes,” “Whole Lot of Shakin’ Going On” and “Long Tall Sally.”
His 1961 version of Chubby Checker’s “Let’s Twist Again” sold 1 million copies, and his early appearances in France caused riots.
“Johnny Hallyday introduced American rock ’n’ roll to a vast French-speaking audience around the world,” Howard Kramer, curatorial director at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum, told The Times.
“He had a great reputation as a live performer, and he made records that were massively popular. He never really broke out of Europe, but his success was so massive he didn’t really need to.”
Over the decades, Hallyday reportedly sold more than 100 million records and performed before more than 15 million people in concert. In 1966, he selected Jimi Hendrix as an opening act and used eventual Led Zeppelin founder Jimmy Page in the recording studio as a session guitarist.
“Johnny is our god. We live and breathe him,” a man in his 60s told the Times of London in 2009 when Hallyday launched a six-month sold-out farewell conceHallyday, who in recent years had split his time between Paris and Los Angeles, said at the time that he planned to continue recording occasionally. But he said decades on the road had worn him down. He had lung cancer and had repeated health scares over the years, including undergoing back surgery at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.
“I have had enough playing Johnny Hallyday,” the Times of London reported him as saying a week before the 2009 tour. “I want more and more to be Jean-Philippe Smet.”
The son of a Belgian father and a French mother, he was born Jean-Philippe Smet in Paris on June 15, 1943.
His vagabond father, who performed in cabarets and theaters, soon left, and his mother became a model to earn money.
Hallyday was raised by his paternal aunt, who had acted in silent films and had two daughters who became dancers. As a child, he lived with his aunt and cousins in London for several years and traveled with them when they performed in Belgium, Germany and Portugal before returning to Paris.
He also made his film debut as a child — an uncredited walk-on in Henri-Georges Clouzot’s 1955 thriller “Diabolique.”
As a teenager, Hallyday idolized Marlon Brando, Montgomery Clift and James Dean, and his favorite movies were “East of Eden,” “On the Waterfront” and “The Wild One.”
“I adored all that period in the history of cinema — everything that spilled forth from the Actors Studio,” he told Fort Lauderdale’s Sun-Sentinel in 2003. “I actually wanted to be an actor before I became a singer. But when I was 12, I discovered rock ’n’ roll through Elvis Presley.” At 17, he recalled, “I was playing a ballroom gig one Sunday to get some money to pay for my acting classes when a producer heard me and asked me to do a record. I did it, and it all just happened from there.”
Hallyday began appearing in French movies after he gained rock ’n’ roll fame, but he primarily played singers.
“It wasn’t what I wanted to do,” he told the New York Times in 2003. “I wanted to separate the singer from the actor. So I stopped for several years and then started to work again with [directors] Costa-Gavras, Jean-Luc Godard — roles where I wasn’t a singer at all.”
Hallyday received critical acclaim for his role as a bank robber in director Patrice Leconte’s “Man on the Train.”
“He’s the equivalent of Joan of Arc in France,” late actor Jean Rochefort, who co-starred in the film, once told the New York Times. “For me, he isn’t really an actor but a man who has a presence, an undeniable charisma.”
Hallyday, who had several marriages, including to French singing star Sylvie Vartan, is survived by his wife, Laeticia; and four children, Jade, Joy, Laura Smet and Dave.
Tom Betts- Enzo G. Castellari
- Messages : 339
Date d'inscription : 06/11/2010
Sujets similaires
» A tout casser - 1967 - John Berry
» La ballade de Johnny Ringo ( La balada de Johnny Ringo ) –1966- José Luis MADRID
» Johnny English : Le Retour - Johnny English : Reborn - Oliver Parker - 2011
» Tuez Johnny Ringo ( Uccidete Johnny Ringo ) – 1966 - Gianfranco BALDANELLO
» [ Vedette ] Vedette ] Tony Anthony
» La ballade de Johnny Ringo ( La balada de Johnny Ringo ) –1966- José Luis MADRID
» Johnny English : Le Retour - Johnny English : Reborn - Oliver Parker - 2011
» Tuez Johnny Ringo ( Uccidete Johnny Ringo ) – 1966 - Gianfranco BALDANELLO
» [ Vedette ] Vedette ] Tony Anthony
Page 1 sur 1
Permission de ce forum:
Vous ne pouvez pas répondre aux sujets dans ce forum