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Alice Robitaille (February 3, 1923 – May 28, 2011), from Quebec City, "petite Alys" (little Alys), was a French Canadian singer mainly remembered for her later French interpretations of Latin American songs, who performed under the stage name Alys Robi.

Alys Robi
Robi during the recording of the radio show "Revoir Paris" in 1945
Background information
Birth nameAlice Robitaille
Born(1923-02-03)February 3, 1923
Quebec City, Quebec, Canada
DiedMay 28, 2011(2011-05-28) (aged 88)
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
GenresLatin American music
Instrument(s)Vocals
Years active1930–2011

Youth


Born in 1923 in the Quebec City neighbourhood of Saint-Sauveur, Robitaille displayed talent for singing and acting at a very young age. She first performed on-stage at the Capitol Theatre at 7. At the time, she had already sung on-air with the CHRC radio station and was a real phenomenon in the whole city.[1]


Career


Robi performing for CKAC in 1943
Robi performing for CKAC in 1943

At 13 she moved to the Théâtre National, on Montreal's Saint Catherine Street.[1] Under the direction of Rose Ouellette, she learned acting and singing during a 75-week engagement. She continued her career in the Montreal cabarets, making radio appearances. For a time during the war, she also hosted a French radio show named Tambour battant ("Rumbling drum"). Touring Canadian military bases propelled her career across Canada.[1]

During the 1940s, she started producing 78s and she became renowned far beyond Canada. She captured popular imagination with Latin titles like Besame Mucho and Tico tico, after translating herself the Spanish or Brazilian songs into French.[2] She sang in chic New York City cabarets by the mid forties and in 1947, she travelled to England where she made an appearance on the first regular BBC television programme.


Mental health


In 1948, while traveling by car to Hollywood, she was injured in an accident, and entered a period of depression.[3] After a series of unfortunate diagnoses, and a failed romance, she suffered a mental breakdown and was interned for several years in a Quebec City asylum.[1] She was at some point subjected to a lobotomy against her will.[4] She credited the operation with her recovery:

"Je me réveillai guérie et j'ai compris plus tard que j'avais été un des rares cas réussis de lobotomie" (I woke up better and later understood that I was one of the rare lobotomy success stories).[5] In 1952, she was released. The same year, she came back on stage at the Casa Loma and the Montmartre, but her efforts were impeded by taboos about mental problems and she never regained the same level of popularity.


Later years


In the early 1990s, Alys returned into the public eye after the massive success she had with a song written for her by Alain Morisod ("Laissez-moi encore chanter"). Books, theses, plays and television series were written about her. A movie was released in December 2004: Alys Robi: Ma vie en cinémascope ("Alys Robi: My Life in Cinemascope"), titled Bittersweet Memories in English.

Robitaille has published two autobiographies: Ma carrière, ma vie ("My Career, My Life", 1980) and Un long cri dans la nuit: Cinq Années à l'Asile ("A Long Cry in the Night: Five Years in the Asylum", 1990). The last autobiography title comes from the song Un long cri dans la nuit, written and composed for Lady Alys by the songwriter Christine Charbonneau in 1989.

Several of Robi's songs have been used for commercial ads. Sico, notably, played on the similarity between its brand name and the title of "Tico Tico" to produce a very catchy campaign based on a spoof of the song.

Robitaille died in the Hôpital Maisonneuve-Rosemont, Montreal, at the age of 88, on May 28, 2011.


Discography



Compilations



References


  1. "Alice Robitaille: la grande Alys" (in French). City of Montreal. Retrieved 14 April 2010.
  2. "Mort d'Alys Robi : Le destin hollywoodien de la première star mondiale du Québec" (in French). Pure People. Retrieved 31 May 2011.
  3. "Robi, Alys". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 14 April 2010.
  4. Hayter, Sparkle. "Bittersweet memories". SEE magazine. Archived from the original on 30 April 2010. Retrieved 14 April 2010.
  5. Long Cri dans la nuit: Cinq Années à l'Asile, cited in Alys Robi Archived 2008-11-21 at the Wayback Machine, lamiredegisele.com

Further reading



На других языках


[de] Alys Robi

Alys Robi (Alice Robitaille; * 3. Februar 1923 in Québec; † 28. Mai 2011 in Montreal) war eine kanadische Sängerin.
- [en] Alys Robi

[fr] Alys Robi

Alys Robi (née Marie Alice Albertine Robitaille le 3 février 1923 à Québec[1], et morte le 28 mai 2011 à Montréal[2],[3],[4]) est la première chanteuse québécoise de renommée internationale. Surnommée "la chanteuse de la guerre", elle a interprété les répertoires français et américain durant la Seconde Guerre mondiale, période où l'importation de disques français était presque impossible au Québec. Elle a fait découvrir le répertoire latino-américains aux Canadiens francophones et anglophones dans ses propres traductions, ce qui lui a valu un succès extraordinaire. L'une des premières femmes canadiennes à animer sa propre émission de radio à Toronto (en anglais), Latin American Serenade, elle a enregistré plusieurs disques avec RCA Victor (Montréal, New York) et la Southern Publishing Company (Los Angeles). Sa carrière internationale l'a amenée à se produire dans les clubs huppés de New York (dont le Copacabana et le Blue Angel) et de Londres (dont l'Orchid Room) et à donner des spectacles dans le monde entier. Après avoir passé un an au Mexique (1945-46), où elle a joué avec le musicien Gabriel Ruiz et produite à la chaîne radiophonique XEW, elle s'est hissée pour la troisième fois jusqu'à Hollywood (1948), où elle a signé un contrat pour jouer dans une comédie musicale. Un accident de voiture sur l'autoroute menant de Los Angeles à Las Vegas, suivi d'une hospitalisation de huit semaines pour commotion cérébrale dans un hôpital de Los Angeles, ont signé le début de la fin de sa carrière internationale.



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