Hélène Ségara

Hélène Ségara

Hélène Ségara
Background information
Birth name Hélène Rizzo
Born 26 February 1971 (1971-02-26) (age 41)
Origin Six-Fours-les-Plages, France
Genres Pop
Occupations Singer–songwriter
Years active 1985–present
Labels East West, Warner Music, Mercury, Universal Music
Associated acts Notre-Dame de Paris
Website lnsegara.artistes.universalmusic.fr

Hélène Ségara (French pronunciation: [e.lɛn se.ga.ʁa]) (born Hélène Rizzo on 26 February 1971 in Six-Fours-les-Plages, Var) is a French female singer revealed in her interpretation of Esmeralda in the French musical Notre Dame de Paris.

Contents

Biography

Her childhood in the French Riviera

Hélène Ségara was born on 26 February 1971 in Six-Fours-les-Plages in her grandfather's farm. Her father is of Italian descent and mother is Armenian.

She said that she had been traumatized in her childhood by the divorce of her parents when she was 8, and by the death of her grandfather when she was 16.[1] As she wanted to become a singer, she left school and family at the age of 14.

Then she had many successive jobs including performances in the piano bars of the French Riviera. At 18, she gave birth to Raphael, her first son. Her repertoire was expanding, with many musical influences and over a thousand songs.[2] In 1993, a first single entitled "Loin" was released, but didn't meet success.

Her life in Paris

In 1996, accompanied by her young son, she moved to Paris, where she met Christian Loigerot, who became one of her composers. She also met the famous producer Orlando, Dalida's brother, who supervised and gave new impetus to her career. Although she was marked by the experience and professionalism of this mentor, she remains under contract with her first producer.

Ségara began to have success with "Je vous aime adieu," the first single from her debut album, Cœur de verre (1996), and the duet "Vivo per lei," performed with Andrea Bocelli. She then played the role of Esmeralda in the musical Notre Dame de Paris, composed by Richard Cocciante. While she auditioned for this role in 1997, she was selected in 1999, following the withdrawal of the Israeli singer Noa. "When the fate knocks at the door for a second time, we must not let it get away," said Ségara.

However, her career was jeopardized after being diagnosed with a cyst on her vocal cords, while she continued to perform in a show. During a show in Canada, she lost her voice. Her producer then resold her contract to Orlando, while a laser operation was carried out to treat her vocal cords.

A new start

After her convalescence, she recorded her second album, Au Nom d'une femme in 2000. The album topped the charts, and became Diamond disc. Five singles from this album were all successful. Ségara then began a concert tour that lasted about two years. A video recording of the concert she gave at the Olympia in Paris on this occasion was released. According to a poll made by the IFOP, Segara was the French people's favourite French singer at the time.

In March 2003 was released a third album, Humaine, including "On n'oublie rien, on vit avec", a duet with Laura Pausini and "L'Amour est un soleil", composed by Romano Musumarra. About 700,000 copies of this album were sold. She started another tour in late 2003 but was forced to stop her performances because of a difficult pregnancy.

In August 2003, Ségara married in Ajaccio Mathieu Lecat (son of journalist Didier Lecat), with whom she had two other children: Matteo (born in May 2003) and Maïa (October 2004).

Her fourth studio album, Quand l'éternité ... came out in 2006. The first single from this album was "Méfie-toi de moi", followed by "Rien n'est comme avant". This album has a different style from previous ones, with more pronounced rock influences, texts almost all composed by the singer, and that addresses issues such as the absence, death and hope. The album eventually achieved gold status three months after its release for more than 200,000 copies sold. In early 2007, she made a new concerts tour in France, including the Palais des Sports in Paris.

In 2007, when she finished the first part of her tour, two other songs from the album were sent to the radio: "Tu ne seras jamais libre" and "Father". Both songs were not released as singles. In late 2007, several editions came out : a box set with of 3 CDs (Les 50 plus belles chansons d'Hélène Segara), two boxes composed of 2 CDs with a new cover (Cœur de verre + Au Nom d'une femme, Humaine + Quand l'éternité...) and a CD 'Prestige' with 15 tracks. In February 2008, she released "La Moitié de nous", a duet with Bruno Pelletier, whose a part of profits were given to an association name Rêves.[3] The tour "Quand l'éternité..." is ongoing until summer 2008, in France and abroad. This year, Ségara will also record a new album that is described by herself as a "realistic travel around the world", with a link between all the songs. This album will be released at the end of the year, before a new international tour, including two concerts at the Olympia on 22 and 23 November 2008.

Other participations

Awards

Discography

Albums

Singles

Preceded by
Natacha Atlas
Victoires de la Musique
Female artist of the year

2001
Succeeded by
Zazie

External links

References

  1. ^ Hélène Ségéra, Didier Lecat, En aparté, Albin Michel, 2003 (ISBN|2226142991)
  2. ^ 1,200 songs in seven languages : English, Arabic, Spanish, French, Hebrew, Italian and Portuguese, according to her own statements
  3. ^ Statement on the official website of the association
This article incorporates information from the revision as of 2008-06-07 of the equivalent article on the French Wikipedia.