
Jean-Jacques Goldman
Acting
🎂 1951-10-10
Jean-Jacques Goldman (born 11 October 1951) is a French singer-songwriter and music record producer. He is hugely popular in the French-speaking world. Since the death of Johnny Hallyday in 2017 he has been the highest grossing living French pop rock act. Born in Paris and active in the music scene since 1975, he had a highly successful solo career in the 1980s, and was part of the trio Fredericks Goldman Jones, releasing another string of hits in the 1990s. He also wrote successful albums and songs for many artists, including D'eux for Céline Dion, which is the most successful French language record to date. He was also part of the Les Enfoirés charity collective from 1986 to 2016, and got his most notable official recognition in the English-speaking world for winning a Grammy Award for Album of the Year in 1997, as a co-author of three tracks on Céline Dion's Falling into You. Despite a voluntary retirement from the music scene in the early 2000s, he remains highly appreciated and influential in France. Born in Paris to an immigrant Polish Jewish father, Alter Mojze Goldman (born in Lublin) and a German Jewish mother, Ruth Ambrunn (born in Munich), Jean-Jacques Goldman was the third of four children. As a child, he began his music studies on the violin, then the piano. In 1968, he abandoned his classical music studies for "American Rock & Roll" as well as folk music, listening to The Beatles, Jimi Hendrix or Aretha Franklin, and emphasizing the guitar. He also earned a business degree from the École des hautes études commerciales du Nord, commonly known as EDHEC, in Lille. In 1972, he met Catherine, his first wife, with whom he had three children. He first entered the French music scene as a member of a progressive rock group named Taï Phong ("great wind", "typhoon" in Vietnamese), which released its first album in 1975. Their first song to be a moderate hit was "Sister Jane". After three albums in English (on which he sang and played guitar as well as violin), Goldman was determined to write and sing in French, which led him to leave the band. ... Source: Article "Jean-Jacques Goldman" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Cast credits(58)

Self
1975

Self
1982

Self (archive footage)
1982

Self
1972

Self
1998

Self
1987

Self
2001

Self
1985

Self - Musical Guest
1990

Self
1990

Self
1993

Self (archive footage)
2022

Self (archive footage)
2024

2008

1996

2010

2016

2014

1995

2005

1999

2014

Self
2021

1993

1994

2001

1989

1998

1997

2002

Self
1999

2015

Self
1999

1992

Self
2021

Self (archival footage)
2024

Self
1999

2000

2013

Self
2003

Self
2000
Chanteur
2000

Self
2017

Self
1995

Self
2003

Self
2000
Self
1995

Self
1999
2003

Self
2021

Self
2016
Self (archive footage)
2021
Self
1989

Self
2000

Self - chanteur
2004

Chanteur
1989

1986
2003