Colette Bonheur is observed in the
radio show The Phantom of the keyboard (piano)
CKVL-FM (Montreal), led by Jacques Normand, Gilles Pellerin and
pianist Billy Munro in the late 1940s. The singer joined by following the
cabaret troupe The Golden Pheasant by Jacques Normand in October 1950. From 1954 to 1957, she shared with Jacques Normand Gilles Pellerin and starred in the
variety show door open on the
Radio-Canada. Meanwhile, she sang in cabarets Montreal's most popular contemporaries such as Cabaret Saint-Germain-des-Pres (Montreal), The Continental Café, rue Saint-Urbain in Montreal or Quebec Chez Gerard. In the fall of 1954 she participated with Jacques Normand, Gilles Pellerin, Normand Hudon, Pierre Theriault and other programming of three Beavers, a new tavern opened above the Café Saint-Jacques. Her rendition of "Violets fields" Yves Beauparlant won her the prize in radio Canadian singing contest in 1957. In 1961 she married the
saxophonist Gerry Robinson with whom she will settle in the Bahamas. Colette Bonheur is the daughter of Quebec singer and actress Lise Bonheur (born Leontine Laurendeau), sister of singer and painter
Guylaine Guy, painter Lise Chailler, and singer and artist Monique Chailler. Colette is also niece to
John Philip Sousa's first oboeist Alexander Laurendeau. She died on October 15, 1966, in
Freeport, Bahamas from a forced drug overdose by her husband. == Discography ==