In 2005, Johnny Hallyday sang "She mocks it", a song written by Muriel Robin.

15 later, the comedian is still surprised by this experience, which she finds it hard to say to herself that it really existed, as she explains at the microphone of Philippe Vandel in the program "Culture Médias". 

INTERVIEW

She is the first to find it hard to believe it.

At the beginning of the 2000s, Muriel Robin wrote 

She doesn't care

, a song that we find in 2005 sung by none other than Johnny Hallyday.

The title even appears on the singer's album called 

Ma Vérité, 

released that year.

15 years later, Muriel Robin tells in

Culture Médias

how the pond how this text came to her, she who had never written a song before.

>> Find Culture Médias in replay and podcast here

When inspiration comes to Muriel Robin, she is on vacation in Mauritius with her sister.

The comedian leaves the beach and runs to his room to write down the ideas that come to him.

"These are texts that have fallen on me," she is surprised.

"When you are in the water, when you go to write something and in ten minutes you have made a text, whereas you have never written a song in your life, it's something really sent from the sky. "

The experience is all the more surprising for Muriel Robin as this sudden need to write a song text has never been renewed.

“It stopped like it started. It ended with Johnny's song,” she explains.

"Listen Mumu, it's your song!"

Because Johnny Hallyday sang well this text fallen from the sky.

Muriel Robin called Jean-Claude Camus, the singer's producer, who informed her while they were looking for texts, and that she had only to send them hers.

Muriel Robin forgets this episode a little, until a call from the singer.

“Johnny was in the studio in London, he said to me 'Listen Mumu, this is your song!', And he makes me listen to the song, with his voice singing on it,” she recalls.

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A few months later, Muriel Robin is in the car with the singer.

"I get in his Bentley, he puts on a record and he says to me again 'Listen Mumu, it's your song!', And I saw myself watching Johnny in black and white on TV," says the comedian raising his eyebrows in astonishment. 

15 years later, Muriel Robin indeed still seems to have trouble believing that Johnny Hallyday sang one of his texts.

"I couldn't imagine writing a song for Johnny, I have a sense of who Johnny is and who I am ... I know it existed since you can even listen to the song", she finished by adding, as if to be convinced of it.