Corinne Hermès | |
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Also known as |
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Born | (1961-11-16)16 November 1961 (age 63) Lagny-sur-Marne, Seine-et-Marne, France |
Genres |
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Occupation | Singer-songwriter |
Instrument | Vocals |
Years active | 1974–present |
Labels | Marianne Melodie |
Website | www |
Corinne Hermès (bornCorinne Bondeaux; 16 November 1961) is a French singer. She representedLuxembourg at theEurovision Song Contest 1983 where she won with "Si la vie est cadeau" ("If life is a gift"), which brought the Grand Duchy its fifth and hitherto final victory.
Corinne's career began in 1974 when she won a singing contest inRoquebrune-sur-Argens. Five years later, during the recording of her singleLa ville où je vis / Le blouson gris, the composer and producer Bernard Estardy heard her voice and offered her the leading female role in his upcoming musical comedy, 36 Front populaire, where she would have appeared alongsideJulien Clerc. A double album of songs from the musical was released, but the musical was never staged for political considerations – the satirical jabs at a left-wing government were ill-timed given the centre-right government in France of the time.
In 1983, Corinne was selected internally byRTL to represent Luxembourg in the 28thEurovision Song Contest, held inMunich, Germany. Her song,Si la vie est cadeau, composed by Jean-Pierre Millers and with lyrics from Alain Garcia, was performed last on the night and received 142 points, with maximum points from 6 competitors. This was enough to bring Luxembourg their fifth and final victory to date, with a slender margin of only 6 points over the runner-up, Israel'sOfra Haza. This victory tied Luxembourg with France for the most number of wins, until Ireland overtook both in the mid-90s. It was the twelfth French language song in 28 editions to win, but since, only two Francophone entries have won. Her winning song spent nine weeks in the French top 10, peaking at No. 4 a week after the contest, but other than a short spell in the top 20 in Sweden and Switzerland, it was the first Eurovision winner since the early 1960s to not achieve notable commercial success in another country, despite also having recorded versions in both German and English.
After her victory, Corinne announced a new album, but only two songs –Vivre à deux andMichaël – were released, and soon after, her producerHaim Saban left for the United States. In 1986, she released the singleMa liberté and in 1989, regained success withDessine-moi, which reached the top 20 in France and peaked at No. 2 in the Francophone Belgian charts. Subsequently, Corinne received recognition as Best female révélation (newcomer) in the 1990Victoires de la Musique, musical awards presented by theFrench Ministry of Culture, a decision that caused controversy given that the song had first been published ten years prior.
In 1993, she recorded the songL'amour est artiste, composed byFrançois Valéry, for use as the theme tune to theTF1 dramaLes Grandes Marées. In 2000, she was invited to represent France in the international jury that choseEstonia's entry for theEurovision Song Contest 2000. The following year, she presented the points of the French vote in theEurovision Song Contest 2001.
In 2006, she released a new album, Vraie, in partnership withChérie FM andFnac. From that album, two new singles were released:S'il n'y avait pas les mots andOn vit comme on aime, the latter of which with a music video featuring the Corsican-born Belgian comedian François Vincentelli. A previously unreleased song,Seule sans toi, was included in the compilation albumI love you in Beautiful Paris in 2009, and Corinne released a best-of compilation of her own in 2012. Her latest album to date,Intemporelle was released in 2019 and is a selection of 10 covers of famous French and international songs.
Awards and achievements | ||
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Preceded by | Winner of the Eurovision Song Contest 1983 | Succeeded by |
Preceded by | Luxembourg in the Eurovision Song Contest 1983 | Succeeded by |