Musical career Aznavour was already familiar with performing on stage by the time he began his career as a musician. At the age of nine, he had roles in a play called '
and a film entitled '. Aznavour then turned to professional dancing and performed in several nightclubs. In 1944, he and actor
Pierre Roche began a partnership and in collaborative efforts performed in numerous nightclubs. It was through this partnership that Aznavour began to write songs and sing. Meanwhile, Aznavour wrote his first song entitled '''' in 1944. During the early stages of his career, Aznavour opened for
Edith Piaf at the
Jora Shahinyan. Piaf then advised him to pursue a career in singing. Piaf helped Aznavour develop a distinctive voice that stimulated the best of his abilities. Aznavour sang frequently about love. He wrote or co-wrote
musicals, more than one thousand songs, and recorded ninety-one studio albums. Aznavour's voice was shaded towards the tenor range, but possessed the low range and coloration more typical of a baritone, contributing to his unique sound. Aznavour spoke and sang in many languages (French, English, Italian, Spanish, German, Russian,
Armenian,
Neapolitan and
Kabyle), which helped him perform at
Carnegie Hall, in the US, and other major venues around the world. He also recorded at least one song from the 18th-century Armenian poet
Sayat-Nova (in 1988), an Armenian-French song with
Bratsch (in 2007), and a popular song, '''' (in 2009) in Armenian. "
Que C'est Triste Venise", sung in French, Italian (""), Spanish (""), English ("How Sad Venice Can Be") and German (""), was very successful the mid-1960s. 1972 saw the release of his 23rd studio album, '''', which contained among others, two of his classics - "" (Old-Fashioned Pleasures) and "" (As They Say), the latter dealing with homosexuality, which at the time, was revolutionary. In 1974, Aznavour became a major success in the United Kingdom when his song "
She" was number 1 on the
UK Singles Chart for four weeks during a fourteen-week run. His other well-known song in the UK was the 1973 "
The Old Fashioned Way", which was on UK charts for 15 weeks. Artists who have recorded his songs and collaborated with Aznavour include
Édith Piaf,
Fred Astaire,
Frank Sinatra (Aznavour was one of the rare European singers invited to duet with him),
Andrea Bocelli,
Bing Crosby,
Ray Charles,
Bob Dylan (he named Aznavour among the greatest live performers he had ever seen),
Dusty Springfield,
Liza Minnelli,
Mia Martini,
Elton John,
Dalida,
Serge Gainsbourg,
Josh Groban,
Petula Clark,
Tom Jones,
Shirley Bassey,
José Carreras,
Laura Pausini,
Roy Clark,
Nana Mouskouri,
Peggy Lee and
Julio Iglesias. Fellow French pop singer
Mireille Mathieu sang and recorded with Aznavour on numerous occasions. The English singer
Marc Almond was noted by Aznavour as his favourite interpreter of his songs, having covered Aznavour's "What makes a man a man" in the 1990s. Almond cited Aznavour as a major influence on his style and work. In 1974,
Jack Jones recorded an entire album of Aznavour compositions entitled
Write Me A Love Song, Charlie, re-released on CD in 2006. Two years later, in 1976, Dutch singer
Liesbeth List released her album
Charles Aznavour Presents Liesbeth List, which featured Aznavour's compositions with English lyrics. Aznavour and Italian tenor
Luciano Pavarotti sang
Gounod's aria "
Ave Maria" together. He performed with Russian cellist and friend
Mstislav Rostropovich to inaugurate the
French presidency of the European Union in 1995.
Elvis Costello recorded "She" for the film
Notting Hill. One of Aznavour's greatest friends and collaborators from the music industry was Spanish operatic tenor
Plácido Domingo, who often performs his hits, most notably a solo studio recording of "" in 1985 and duet versions of the song in French and Spanish in 2008, as well as multiple live renditions of Aznavour's "Ave Maria". In 1994, Aznavour performed with Domingo again and Norwegian
soprano Sissel Kyrkjebø at Domingo's third annual
Christmas in Vienna concert. The three singers performed a variety of carols, medleys and duets, and the concert was televised throughout the world, as well as
released on a CD internationally. At the start of autumn 2006, Aznavour initiated his farewell tour, performing in the United States and Canada, and earning very positive reviews. Aznavour started 2007 with concerts all over Japan and Asia. The second half of 2007 saw Aznavour return to Paris for over 20 shows at the
Palais des Congrès in Paris, followed by more touring in Belgium, the Netherlands, and the rest of France. Aznavour had repeatedly stated that this farewell tour, health permitting, would likely last beyond 2010; after that, however, Charles Aznavour continued performing worldwide throughout the year. At 84, 60 years on stage made him "a little hard of hearing". In his final years he would still sing in multiple languages and without persistent use of teleprompters, but typically he would stick to just two or three (French and English being the primary two, with Spanish or Italian being the third) during most concerts. On 30 September 2006, Aznavour performed a major concert in
Yerevan, the capital of Armenia, to start off the cultural season "". Then Armenian president
Robert Kocharyan and his French counterpart
Jacques Chirac, at the time on an official visit to Armenia, were in front-row attendance. In 2006, Aznavour recorded his album ''
in Cuba, with Chucho Valdés. A regular guest vocalist on Star Academy'', Aznavour sang alongside contestant
Cyril Cinélu that same year. In 2007, he sang part of "
Une vie d'amour" in Russian during a Moscow concert. Later, in July 2007, Aznavour was invited to perform at the
Vieilles Charrues Festival.
Forever Cool (2007), an album from Capitol/EMI, features Aznavour singing a new duet of "
Everybody Loves Somebody Sometime" with the voice of
Dean Martin. Aznavour finished a tour of Portugal in February 2008. Throughout the spring of 2008, Aznavour toured South America, holding a multitude of concerts in
Argentina, Brazil, Chile and
Uruguay. An admirer of
Quebec, where he played in
Montreal cabarets before becoming famous, he helped the career of Québécoise singer-lyricist
Lynda Lemay in France, and had a house in Montreal. On 5 July 2008, he was invested as an honorary officer of the
Order of Canada. He performed the following day on the
Plains of Abraham as a feature of the
celebration of the 400th anniversary of the founding of
Quebec City. In 2008, an album of duets,
Duos, was released. It is a collaborative effort featuring Aznavour and his greatest friends and partners from his long career in the music industry, including
Céline Dion,
Sting,
Laura Pausini,
Josh Groban,
Paul Anka, Plácido Domingo and many others. It was released on various dates in December 2008 across the world. His next album,
Charles Aznavour and The Clayton Hamilton Jazz Orchestra (previously known as
Jazznavour 2), is a continuation in the same vein as his hit album
Jazznavour released in 1998, involving new arrangements on his classic songs with a jazz orchestra and other guest jazz artists. It was released on 27 November 2009. Aznavour and
Senegalese singer
Youssou N'Dour, with the collaboration of over 40 French singers and musicians, recorded a music video with the music group
Band Aid in the aftermath of the
catastrophic 2010 Haiti earthquake, titled ''''. In 2009, Aznavour also toured across America. The tour, named '
, started in late April 2009 with a wave of concerts across the United States and Canada, took him across Latin America in the autumn, as well as the USA once again. In August 2011 Aznavour released a new album, ', featuring 11 new songs, and '
, a French re-working of his greatest international hit, "She". Following the release of ', then 87-year-old Aznavour began a tour across France and Europe, named '''', which started with 21 concerts in the Olympia theatre in Paris. On 12 December 2011, he gave a concert in Moscow
State Kremlin Palace that attracted a capacity crowd. The concert was followed by a standing ovation which continued for about fifteen minutes. In 2012, Aznavour embarked on a new North American leg of his '''' tour, visiting
Quebec and the
Gibson Amphitheatre in Los Angeles, the third-largest such venue in California, for multiple shows. However, the shows in New York were cancelled following a contract dispute. On 16 August 2012, Aznavour performed in his father's birthplace,
Akhaltsikhe, in Georgia in a special concert as part of the opening ceremony of the recently restored Rabati castle. On 25 October 2013, Aznavour performed in London for the first time in 25 years at the
Royal Albert Hall; demand was so high that a second concert at the Royal Albert Hall was scheduled for June 2014. In November 2013, Aznavour appeared with
Achinoam Nini (Noa) in a concert, dedicated to peace, at the Nokia Arena in
Tel Aviv. The audience, including Israeli president
Shimon Peres (Peres and Aznavour had a meeting prior to the performance), sang along. In December 2013, Aznavour gave two concerts in the Netherlands at the
Heineken Music Hall in Amsterdam, and again in January 2016 (originally scheduled for November 2015, but postponed due to him suffering a brief bout of
stomach flu). Aznavour continued his international tour performing in many cities around the world between 2014 and 2018. On 19 September 2018, what was to be his last concert took place in the NHK Hall of Osaka.
Film appearances See: Filmography Aznavour also had a long and varied parallel career as an actor, appearing in over 80 films and TV movies. In 1960, Aznavour starred in
François Truffaut's
Tirez sur le pianiste (released in America as
Shoot the Piano Player), playing a character called Édouard Saroyan, a café pianist. He also put in a critically acclaimed performance in the 1974 movie
And Then There Were None. Aznavour had an important supporting role in 1979's
The Tin Drum, winner of the
Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 1980. He co-starred in
Claude Chabrol's
Les Fantômes du chapelier from 1982. In the 1984 version of
Die Fledermaus, he appears and performs as one of Prince Orlovsky's guests. This version stars
Kiri Te Kanawa and was directed by Plácido Domingo in the Royal Opera House at
Covent Garden. Aznavour starred in the 2002 movie
Ararat, reprising his role of Edward (Édouard) Saroyan. == Politics and activism ==