Faegheh Atashin (Persian: فائقه آتشین; born 5 May 1950), known professionally as Googoosh (Persian: گوگوش, Persian pronunciation: [guːˈguːʃ]), is an Iranian singer and former actress. One of the most popular and prolific entertainers in Iran, her career has spanned over six decades.[2][3][4] Googoosh has enjoyed significant popularity since the beginning of her career, ultimately becoming a cultural icon inside Iran and abroad.[5][6][7]
Googoosh | |
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![]() Googoosh at the Hollywood Bowl, May 2018 | |
Born | Faegheh Atashin (1950-05-05) May 5, 1950 (age 72)[1] Tehran, Iran |
Occupation |
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Years active | 1953–1979; 2000–present |
Spouse(s) | Mahmoud Ghorbani
(m. 1967; div. 1972)Homayoun Mesdaghi
(m. 1977; div. 1989) |
Children | 1 |
Musical career | |
Labels | Avang, Caltex, MZM, Pars Video, Taraneh, RCA Italiana, RCA Victor, Barclay |
Website | Official website ![]() |
Musical artist |
She is mainly known for her contributions to Iranian pop music, but she also starred in a variety of Persian movies from the 1950s to the 1970s.[8][9] She achieved the pinnacle of her fame and success towards the end of the 1970s. In the 1970s, Googoosh was widely emulated by Iranian women, as they copied her clothing (miniskirts) and her short haircut (known as the "Googooshi").[2][10] Following the Iranian Revolution in 1979, she remained in Tehran until 2000 and did not perform again during that period due to the ban on female singers. Younger generations of Iranians have rediscovered her music via bootleg recordings.[11] After leaving Iran in 2000, she performed a total of 27 concerts in European and North American countries in that year.[12] Recent projects include a new collaboration with Iranian singer-songwriter Hassan Shamaizadeh from her 2012 album Ejaz, as well as serving as head judge and head of academy for the popular reality show Googoosh Music Academy broadcast on London-based satellite channel Manoto 1.[13]
Since her return to the stage in the summer of 2000, she has performed in concerts and venues all around the world, including the Madison Square Garden in New York, the Air Canada Centre in Toronto, the Ericsson Globe in Stockholm, Honda Center in Anaheim, Royal Albert Hall in London and the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles [14] She has recorded songs in many languages including Persian, Azerbaijani, Turkish, English, Spanish, Italian, Arabic, Armenian and French.[15] She has a significant following outside of Iran and has even received the attention of European and African media and press.[16]
Googoosh was born as Faegheh Atashin on 5 May 1950, in Tehran, to Azerbaijani immigrant parents from the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic. According to Googoosh, her name on her birth certificate was Faegheh as the authorities wouldn’t allow Googoosh to be registered.[17][18]
During the 1970s, Googoosh began a meteoric rise to fame and success as she drove the edge of Iranian pop music further and further. Known for her flamboyant outfits and fashion sense, Googoosh wowed her pop-culture-hungry fans in Iran and abroad with her trademark hairdos and hip-elegant style, inspiring many Iranian women to copy her hairdos.[10] Her music ranged from upbeat 1960s and 1970s pop, given a traditional-tinged edge,[19] to declamatory, emotional ballads dealing with love and loss, comparable to the chanson style of music by artists like Édith Piaf. Her music was popular among non-Persian-speaking audiences as well. The Spanish singer Julio Iglesias covered the song Bavar Kon.[20] She starred in over 25 movies, one of which was to be the most commercially successful Iranian motion picture of all time. Googoosh performed many times for the royal family and was a favorite of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's wife and children. She performed at the party given for the 17th birthday of Reza Pahlavi, Crown Prince of Iran.[21]
At the time of the Iranian Revolution in 1979, Googoosh was in Los Angeles. However, feeling homesick, she decided to return to Iran. In response to why she remained in Iran after the revolution, she said that it was "out of love of her for her homeland".[22] Despite being a symbol of many things that the revolution tried to overturn, especially related to perceptions of excessive Westernization, Googoosh remained in Iran for years afterward.[23] After the revolution, Googoosh, like other artists, was forbidden from performing and her material was banned. She would not perform again until Mohammad Khatami's presidency, during which she was allowed to tour outside of the country.
Googoosh, Comeback World Tour | |||
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Country | City | Venue | Date |
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Toronto |
Air Canada Centre |
July 29, 2000 |
Vancouver |
Pacific Coliseum |
August 5, 2000 | |
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Inglewood |
The Forum |
August 19, 2000 |
Uniondale |
Nassau Coliseum |
August 26, 2000 | |
Houston |
Compaq Center |
September 3, 2000 | |
Washington, D.C |
MCI Center |
September 16, 2000 | |
Oakland |
Oakland Arena |
September 23, 2000 | |
Anaheim |
Arrowhead Pond |
October 7, 2000 | |
Los Angeles |
Staples Center |
October 21, 2000 | |
Chicago |
UIC Pavilion |
October 28, 2000 | |
San Jose |
San Jose Arena |
November 5, 2000 | |
Atlantic City |
Trump Taj Mahal |
November 18, 2000 | |
Las Vegas |
MGM Grand Garden Arena |
December 24, 2000 | |
December 25, 2000 | |||
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Oberhausen |
Oberhausen Arena |
December 30, 2000 |
Frankfurt |
Festhalle Frankfurt |
January 1, 2001 | |
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London |
Wembley Arena |
January 6, 2001 |
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Stockholm |
Globen Arena |
January 13, 2001 |
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Bremen |
Stadthalle Bremen |
February 24, 2001 |
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Stockholm |
Globen Arena |
March 3, 2001 |
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Paris |
Zenith Hall |
March 16, 2001 |
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London |
Wembley Arena |
March 17, 2001 |
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Vienna |
Wiener Stadthalle |
March 18, 2001 |
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Dubai |
Dubai World Trade Centre |
March 21, 2001 |
Al Ahli Club Stadium |
March 24, 2001 | ||
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Tunis |
Carthage Amphitheater |
July 19, 2001 |
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Toronto |
Air Canada Centre |
August 18, 2001 |
Googoosh left Iran and went to Canada in 2000, after being in Iran for 21 years following the Iranian Revolution.[12] BMusic's Taghinia, says "Googoosh is the siren of that era [Pre-revolution] and important in that she's really a direct link to Iran's past."[24] Chicago Tribune considers the return of Googoosh to be "more than just a pop milestone" but instead "a cultural marker, a measure of the way change occurs in a society that for more than two decades has tried to resist the tide of globalization by living in self-imposed isolation."[6]
In 2000, Googoosh sang in public, away from her homeland, for the first time after 21 years of silence to the acclaim of many long-time fans.[25][26] The Googoosh Comeback Tour was a series of concerts starting in July 2000. She began with a sold-out concert at the Air Canada Centre in Toronto on 29 July 2000 (with an audience of more than 12,000),[22] and eventually brought the tour to a conclusion in Dubai on 21 and 24 March 2001 on the occasion of the Iranian New Year, Nowruz. Her concert in Dubai was considered a homecoming for her, and out of the more than 20,000 members of the audience, seventy percent of them were Iranians who had crossed the Persian Gulf to hear her.[27][28] The two Dubai concerts held special importance: it was the tour finale, and Googoosh was rumored to be planning to return to Iran. Googoosh made the most money during her pop career and currently has an estimated net worth of 60-70 million dollars.
In 2000, a feature-length documentary called Googoosh: Iran's Daughter was released which chronicled the singer's life and her icon-status while detailing the socio-political turmoil that led to the 1979 Revolution in Iran. Made by Iranian-American filmmaker Farhad Zamani, the documentary began production in 1998 and was made at a time when Googoosh was still forbidden to give interviews.[29]
In January 2009, she ended her work and career with Mehrdad Asemani, citing "creative differences," and in March 2009 began a new work relationship with her current management team. On 21 and 24 March of that year, during Nowruz, Googoosh performed in Dubai.
Googoosh and other speakers participated in a 22 July 2009 protest at the United Nations which attracted exiles from Iran. They stood in front of a banner with names of Iranian protestors who they believed were still incarcerated and of other protestors, written in red, who had been killed. During this protest, Googoosh made a speech stating that she entered politics because of the outcome of the 2009 Iranian presidential election. She said, "I have come here to be the voice for the sad mothers who lost their loved ones in peaceful demonstrations. I have come here to be the just voice of the grass-roots and spontaneous movement among my compatriots and to show my solidarity."[30][31]
Beginning in 2011, she served as head-of-academy and head-judge alongside Hooman Khalatbari and Babak Saeedi for the widely popular talent show/singing competition Googoosh Music Academy, which was broadcast on the London-based Iranian satellite channel Manoto 1 and was their most watched program.[32] Googoosh Music Academy lasted three seasons. In December 2010, Googoosh held a very notable concert in the Kurdish region of Iraq, to which tens of thousands of Iranians came from Tehran and beyond.
In 2010, Googoosh ran a Persian talent competition show called "Googoosh Music Academy." [33] The series ran in Europe and Middle East on Monoto TV channes.[34]
In March 2011, Googoosh released a snippet of a new song she was working on, titled Bedrood, via YouTube. In April 2011, she debuted her latest project. The singer launched her own cosmetic collection sold online, titled Googoosh Cosmetics. In April 2011, she held a concert at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles, as well as a record breaking performance at the same venue on 27 October 2012, as a part of her worldwide Ejaz Tour.[35] Also on 26 March 2013 she performed at London's Royal Albert Hall for the first time,[36] where other notable Persian vocalists such as Elaheh, Ebi and Marzieh have performed memorable concerts in the past.
In 2012, Googoosh released her 6th studio album since her comeback, titled Ejaz. The album consisted of 10 tracks, featuring collaborations with Hassan Shamaizadeh (Hayahoo) and three songs wherein she collaborated with her fellow Googoosh Music Academy judge Babak Saeedi and with Raha Etemadi (Nagoo Bedrood and Noghteye Payan and Hese Mobham). She also collaborated with Alireza Afkari and Roozbeh Bemani on three songs (E'jaz and Baraye Man and Behesht). Another single Bi Manoto was a musical rendition of a poem by the Persian poet Rumi. The poem came to Googoosh's attention while she was banned from singing at the time of the Iran–Iraq War. She stated that she felt inspired by the lyrics and therefore created her own melody and was finally presented with the opportunity to record it as she had long hoped to do.[37]
In February 2014, she released a music video of the song Behesht, in support of the gay and lesbian community in Iran, which faces significant challenges in its struggle for equal rights, including the ongoing threat of the death penalty for convictions related to sexual orientation.[38] This made her the first prominent Iranian with a huge following to speak out against homophobia in Iran.
On 21 March 2015, Googoosh released her 7th album titled Aks-e Khosoosi (Private Portrait) including 11 tracks from different songwriters and composers such as Babak Sahraee, Nickan Ebrahimi, Babak Amini (Googoosh band leader). The first song of this album is Che Ziba Bood, which is also the last song that was composed by Varujan.
Despite the political and personal hardships she has endured, Googoosh has continued to be a beloved figure over the last half century.[39]
Googoosh has three half-brothers on her father's side and a brother and sister on her mother's side. One of her brothers died in his youth.[40]
Googoosh's first husband was Mahmoud Ghorbani, a music promoter who had helped Googoosh make a name for herself throughout the 1960s. Googoosh and Ghorbani married in February 1967.[41] They had a son, Kambiz.[42] After about six years of marriage, Ghorbani and Googoosh divorced in late 1972. In 1975, Googoosh married Iranian actor Behrouz Vossoughi; they divorced fourteen months later in 1976. During their brief marriage they were considered to be the country's biggest celebrity power couple. In 1980, Googoosh was imprisoned for nearly one month after the Iranian Revolution. During the late 1970s, Googoosh became involved with Homayoun Mesdaghi, and married him in 1979. Six years later, in 1985, she divorced Mesdaghi. She then married director Masoud Kimiai in 1991. They divorced in 2005.
In 2018, in reply to a question by interviewer about how she stays young, she said, "Love, music and lots of fruit!".[9]
Studio albums
Albums (since her return to music in 2000)
Singles (After her return to music)
Year | Persian Title[43] | English Title |
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1960 | فرشتۀ فراری | Runaway Angel |
بیم و امید | Fear and Hope | |
1963 | پرتگاه مخوف | The Cliff of Fear |
1965 | شیطون بلا | The Naughty One |
1966 | گدایان تهران | The Beggars of Tehran |
فیل و فنجان | Big and Small | |
حسین کُرد | Hoseyn-e Kord | |
1967 | چهار خواهر | Four Sisters (with Leila Forouhar) |
دروازه تقدیر | The Gate of Fate | |
گنج و رنج | Treasure and Toil | |
در جستجوی تبهکاران | In the Search of Criminals | |
1968 | سه دیوانه | The Three Morons |
شب فرشتگان | The Night of Angels | |
ستاره هفت آسـمان | The Star of Seven Skies | |
1969 | گناه زیبایی | The Sin of Beauty |
1970 | طلوع | Sunrise |
جنجال عروسی | The Wedding Brawl | |
پنجره | The Window | |
1971 | احساس داغ | Hot Feeling |
آسـمون بیستاره | Starless Sky | |
قصاص | Retaliation | |
1972 | بیتا | Bitā |
1973 | خیالاتی | Imaginings |
1975 | هـمسفر | Travelling Mate |
نازنین | Nazanin | |
مـَمَل آمریکایی | American Mamal | |
شب غریبان | Nostalgic Night | |
1976 | ماه عسل | Honeymoon |
1977 | در امتداد شب | Along the Night |
Googoosh also acted in two other movies: Mard-e keraye-i (مرد کرایهای) and Hajji Firuz (حاجی فیروز), but the production of each of these films was suspended during the final stages for unknown reasons. Googoosh has also acted in many television shows and commercials in Iran.
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: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)Googoosh was born Faegheh Atashin in 1951 on Ghubba Street, in an old part of Khorramdarreh, to Azerbaijani immigrant parents from the former Soviet Union.
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