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160

Piaf
was born
Edith Giovanna Gassion on December 19, 1915, in Ménilmontant, one
of the poorer districts of Paris. According to legend, she was born
under a street light on the corner of the Rue de Belleville, with her
mother attended by two policemen; some have disputed this story,
finding it much likelier that she was born in the local hospital.
Whatever the case,
Piaf's
origins were undeniably humble. Her father, Louis Gassion, was a
traveling acrobat and street performer, while her Moroccan-Italian
mother, Anita Maillard, was an alcoholic, an occasional prostitute,
and an aspiring singer who performed in cafés and on street corners
under the name Line Marsa. With her father serving in World War I,
Edith was virtually ignored by both her mother and grandmother;
after the war, her father sent her to live with his own mother, who
helped run a small brothel in the Normandy town of Bernay. The
prostitutes helped look after
Edith when they could; one story goes that when five-year-old
Edith lost her sight during an acute case of conjunctivitis, the
prostitutes shut down the brothel to spend a day praying for her in
church, and her blindness disappeared several days later.
Edith's father returned for her in 1922, and instead of sending
her to school, he brought her to Paris to join his street act. It was
here that she got her first experience singing in public, but her main
duty at first was to pass the hat among the crowd of onlookers,
manipulating extra money from whomever she could. She and her father
traveled all over France together until 1930, when the now-teenaged
Edith had developed her singing into a main attraction. She teamed
up with her half-sister and lifelong partner in mischief, Simone
Berteaut, and sang for tips in the streets, squares, cafés, and
military camps, while living in a succession of cheap, squalid hotels.
She moved in circles of petty criminals and led a promiscuous
nightlife, with a predilection for pimps and other street toughs who
could protect her while she earned her meager living as a street
performer. In 1932, she fell in love with a delivery boy named Louis
Dupont, and bore him a daughter. However, in a pattern she would
repeat throughout her life, she tired of the relationship, cheated,
and ended it before he could do the same. Much like her own mother,
Edith found it difficult to care for a child while working in the
streets, and often left her daughter alone. Dupont eventually took the
child himself, but she died of meningitis several months later.
Edith's next boyfriend was a pimp who took a commission from her
singing tips, in exchange for not forcing her into prostitution; when
she broke off the affair, he nearly succeeded in shooting her.
Photo: The
Grave of Edith Piaf at Pere Lachaise cemetery
Living the high-risk life that she did,
Edith Gassion almost certainly would have come to a bad end had
she not been discovered by cabaret owner Louis Leplée while singing on
a street corner in the Pigalle area in 1935. Struck by the force of
her voice, Leplée took the young singer under his wing and groomed her
to become his resident star act. He renamed her "La Môme Piaf" (which
in Parisian slang translates roughly as "the little sparrow" or "the
kid sparrow"), fleshed out her song repertoire, taught her the basics
of stage presence, and outfitted her in a plain black dress that would
become her visual trademark. Leplée's extensive publicity campaign
brought many noted celebrities to
Piaf's
opening night, including
Maurice Chevalier; she was a smashing success, and in January
1936, she cut her first records for Polydor, "Les Momes de la Cloche"
and "L'Étranger"; the latter was penned by
Marguerite Monnot, who would continue to write for
Piaf
for the remainder of both their careers.
The article continues on the following pages.
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