
Sylvie Vartan
Acting
🎂 1944-08-15
Sylvie Vartan (born Sylvie Georges Vartanian on 15 August 1944) is a Bulgarian-Armenian-French singer and actress. She is known as one of the most productive and tough-sounding yé-yé artists. Her performances often featured elaborate show-dance choreography,[and she made many appearances on French and Italian TV. Yearly shows with then-husband Johnny Hallyday attracted full houses at the Olympia and the Palais des congrès de Paris throughout the 1960s and mid-1970s. In 2004, after a break in performances, she began recording and giving concerts of jazz ballads in francophone countries. Sylvie Vartan was born in Iskrets, Sofia Province, in the then Kingdom of Bulgaria. Her father, Georges Vartanian (1912–1970), was born in France to a Bulgarian mother named Slavka and an Armenian father. He worked as an attaché at the French embassy in Sofia. The family shortened the name Vartanian to Vartan. Her mother, Ilona (née Mayer 1914–2007), daughter of prominent architect Rudolf Mayer, was of Hungarian-Jewish descent. When the Soviet Army invaded Bulgaria in September 1944, the Vartanian family house was nationalised and they moved to Sofia. In 1952, a friend of Sylvie's father, film director Dako Dakovski, offered her the role of a schoolgirl in the movie Pod igoto, a film about Bulgarian rebels against the Ottoman occupation. Participating in the film made her dream of becoming an entertainer come true. The hardships of postwar Bulgaria made the family emigrate to Paris in December 1952. At first they stayed in the Lion d'Argent hotel near Les Halles, where Georges found a job, then for the next four years they stayed in a single room at the Angleterre Hotel. Young Sylvie had to work hard to keep up at school and blend in with her schoolmates. She spent two years learning French. In 1960, her family moved to an apartment in Michel Bizot Avenue. Thanks to the influence of her music producer brother Eddie, music became teenage Sylvie's main interest. Her most influential genres were jazz and, out of spite toward her strict high school, rock 'n' roll. Her favourite artists included Brenda Lee, Bill Haley, and Elvis Presley. In 1961, Eddie offered Sylvie the chance to record the song "Panne d'essence" with French rocker Frankie Jordan. The Decca Records EP was a surprise hit. Although she was not credited on the sleeve, "Panne d'essence" provided Vartan her first appearance on French television. The journalists gave her the nickname la collégienne du twist. After the "twisting schoolgirl" had finished the Victor Hugo High School, she was free to sign a contract with Decca Records to start recording her own EP; carrying the title song "Quand le film est triste", a cover of Sue Thompson's "Sad Movies (Make Me Cry)", the EP was on sale by the beginning of December 1961. ... Source: Article "Sylvie Vartan" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA.
Cast credits(65)

Self
1975

Self
1982

Self
1972

Self
1998

Self
1959
Self
1972

Self
1987

Self
1975

Self - Host
1975

Self (archive footage)
1975

Self
1975

Self
1987

Self
1968

Self
2001

Self
1985

Self
1976
Self
1971

Self - Guest
2001

Self
2009

Self - Guest
2009

Self
1990

Self
1965

Self - Guest
2016

Self
1977
Self
1971

Self - Judge
1986

Self
1973

Self - Guest
2006

Self (archive footage)
2022
Self
1978
Self
1975
Self
2019

Self
1971

Self
2018

Self
1980
Self
1984
Self
1967

Une people à Cannes soirée Melko
2013

Sylvie Vartan
2025

Self (archive footage)
2021

Sylvie Vartan
1967

Bets
1971

Self (archive footage)
2022

Gigi
1963

Stéphane Feuvrier
1994

Self (archive footage)
2023

Sylvie Vartan
1964

Self
2008

La chanteuse yéyé
1962

Self (archive footage)
2022

Self
1972

Une femme à la soirée mondaine
1972

Self
1993

Self
2009

Self
1963
Self
1982

Self
2021

Self
2023

Agnès Taride
2001

Alexa Rollo
1964

Self
1979

Self
1984
Self
2014
Self
2008

Self
2021