Born in
Grenoble,
Isère, the son of doctor and resistance fighter Pierre Fugain, Michel Fugain grew up in the Isère countryside before studying at the Lycée Champollion in Grenoble. Passionate about New Wave cinema, he abandoned his medical studies to become a filmmaker in Paris. Starting in 1963, he became an assistant director to Jean-Michel Barjol, Guy Blanc, Yves Robert, and Jean Delannoy, and then took drama classes with Yves Furet. It was there that he met
Michel Sardou, for whom he composed his first songs. In 1965, Michel Fugain signed a publishing contract with Barclay and wrote melodies for
Hugues Aufray,
Marie Laforêt, and Dalida. He achieved his first success in 1967 with "Je n'aurai pas le temps" (I Will Not Have Time), based on lyrics by Pierre Delanoë, for the Festival record label. At the same time, he directed, with Pierre Sisser, a television musical entitled A Child in the City in 1971. In 1971, Michel Fugain created the Big Bazar, a troupe of singers and dancers dressed in loose, colorful clothing, and driven by the post-1968 hippie and community spirit. For five years, he enjoyed a string of hits with "
Une belle histoire," "Attention mesdames, and messieurs", "Fais comme l’oiseau," "Chante… Comme si tu avais mourir demain," "La Fête," "Les Acadiens," "Le Printemps," and several sold-out performances at the Olympia. In 1974, his musical comedy project for the cinema came to fruition with
Un jour, la fête. After the Big Bazar adventure, Fugain continued to perform, notably in 1977 for a major show in Le Havre, for which he created the activist song "Le Chiffon rouge." He continued his career as an acrobat, then as a teacher, founding a workshop for artists at the Victorine Studios in 1979. The following decades were more difficult, both professionally and personally. Disappointed by his television show Les Fugues à Fugain on TF1, he nevertheless released solo albums and singles such as Viva la vida in 1986, Chaque jour de plus in 1989, and Forteresse in 1992, which earned him a media and stage following. He then embarked on numerous musical collaborations, notably with Belgian singer
Maurane. In 2001, his daughter Laurette was diagnosed with leukemia and succumbed to the illness in 2002. Following her death, Fugain went on a hiatus. Producer Jean-Claude Camus convinced him to embark on new musical projects, such as the show "Attention mesdames et messieurs…" directed by Roger Louret at the Folies Bergère in 2005 and 2006. He paid tribute to his fellow artists by setting their lyrics to music on the album Bravo et merci! in 2007. He announced that he was stopping studio recordings, but returned to the stage with his Projet Pluribus in 2013 and his Causerie musicale in 2017. A popular variety singer, sometimes flirting with jazz and bossa nova, he expresses humanist and libertarian convictions in his songs. He is married to former dancer and actress Stephanie Fugain. ==Discography==