Europe 1 with AFP 10:40 a.m., March 9, 2023

On Wednesday, singer Marcel Amont, star of the music hall, died at the age of 93.

According to a statement from his family, the leaping artist and whimsical showman, with a 75-year career, died at his home in Saint-Cloud, west of Paris.

The early 1970s marked the high point of his career.

Singer Marcel Amont, music hall star known for many hits like "Bleu, blanc, blond", died Wednesday at the age of 93, according to a statement from his family sent to AFP.

The leaping artist and whimsical showman, with a 75-year career, died at his home in Saint-Cloud, west of Paris, said the same source.

>> READ ALSO -

 Marcel Amont, 89 and still on stage: "I simply watched my health"

A "entertainer"

Born on April 1, 1929 in Bordeaux, Marcel Miramon, his real name, "went up" to Paris in 1950, gradually making a name for himself in cabarets.

In 1956, his first record received a Grand Prix from the Académie Charles-Cros and he opened for Edith Piaf at the Olympia.

Despite the yé-yé surge, the singer, who called himself an "entertainer", clings to the stage and remains true to himself, with titles like "Maria and the milk pot" (1965).

He deplores being "one of the few survivors" of the fanciful. 

The early 1970s marked the high point of his career: a gold record in 1971 ("L'amour ça passe le temps"), a triumphant Olympia and a TV show, "Amont-Tour", where he produced with singers and dancers.

He tries his hand at musical comedy with "Why don't you sing?"

(1975), of which he said "the review was good but no one came".

After a period of disgrace, he returned to the Olympia in 1989, before signing his literary debut.

He has also appeared in TV movies.

In recent years, he had celebrated his 90th birthday on stage in Paris in 2019, during a concert at the Alhambra, in the company of artists like Serge Lama or Nicoletta.