REPORTAGE – Performing for six last concerts in Paris before bowing out, the singer retraces the thread of her life on stage. A final rhythmic and complete show.
This Friday, for the first of Sylvie Vartan's last six, it was the big evening crowd at the Palais des Sports in Paris. Hundreds and hundreds of seniors the same age as their idol took photos of themselves in front of the posters. For once, there are as many men as women. Some gentlemen brandish their cell phones with Sylvie in the background. The years may pass, but women, even in their eighties, remain like Vartan: always blonde and long hair. At the entrance to the room, surprise, there are no derivative products to buy as a souvenir of this special evening. Just a huge portfolio of photos for 35 euros.
At the orchestra, in front of a group of fans who have offered themselves two rows at 166 euros per chair, the Bulgarian ambassador rubs shoulders with Valérie-Anne Giscard d'Estaing. Jean-Louis Azoulay is seated next to Darina, the daughter of Sylvie Vartan and Tony Scotti. Benoît Cachin author of My life from stage to stage
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France
Music