Jump to content

Janet Woollacott

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Iridescent (talk | contribs) at 12:09, 3 May 2017 (Biography: Typo fixing, typo(s) fixed: Cote d'Azur → Côte d'Azur using AWB). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Janet Edith Woollacott (Carlton, England (1939-11-04)4 November 1939 – Clamart, Hauts-de-Seine (2011-11-13)13 November 2011) was a British-born French singer of the 1960s to 2000s.

Biography

Woollacott was a dancer on the Côte d'Azur aged 20 when she met Cloclo, Claude François in 1959, they married the following year. Only weeks before François became a major star Woollacott left Cloclo for Gilbert Bécaud, with whom she had a daughter, Jennifer Bécaud. The split was the subject of Claude François' bitter song "Je sais" (1964). Woollacott later wrote a book detailing the time shared with François. François never remarried and died in 1978.

In later years she remarried three more times; to the producer Jean-Paul Barkoff, the Charlot comedian Jean Sarrus and the composer Dominique Perrier. From 1994, she collaborated with Stone Edge,[1] later renamed to Stone Age, the French/Breton Celtic techno band formed by her husband Dominique Perrier, with which she regularly performed and recorded songs, appearing on the band's best known album, "Time Travellers", as "Maureen" (1997).[2]

She died after a long illness on 13 November 2011(2011-11-13) (aged 72), and was buried three days later in the Clamart cemetery.

Memoir

  • Claude François, les années oubliées (1998)

Discography

  • Je t’aime… normal et Super-gangsters, with Jean Sarrus (Vogue, 1970)
  • Bénie soit la pluie (Sugar me) and "Le chocolat" (Motors/Discodis, 1972)
  • "Mama" and "The Dream", soundtrack from the film Adieu blaireau (Ariola Records, 1985)

With Stone Edge

With Stone Age

  • Time Travellers (Sony Records, 1997)
  • Promessa (2000)
  • Totems d'Armorique (2007)

References