French singer France Gall, who shot to fame in the 1960s with a series of hits and a sexually suggestive song about lollipops written by Serge Gainsbourg, died yesterday aged 70, her spokeswoman announced.
Gall, who became a star in 1965 when she won the Eurovision song contest as a strikingly blonde and slightly awkward teenager, had been battling cancer for two years and died in a hospital west of Paris.
During the peak of her career in the 1960s and 70s she formed partnerships with some of the most famed French musicians of the era, notably Gainsbourg, but also Claude Francois and Michel Berger.
She was the original inspiration behind the 1968 hit Comme d’Habitude, which was made famous in its English rendition as My Way by American crooner Frank Sinatra.
Glam-rocker Francois wrote Comme d’Habitude about his split-up with Gall.
Later reworked as My Way by English performer Paul Anka, the song went on to become the Sinatra classic.
After Gall’s first breakthrough at Eurovision with Poupee de Cire, Poupee de Son (Wax Doll, Rag Doll), Gainsbourg wrote her 1966 follow-up, the scandalous Les Sucettes (The Lollipops).
After collaborating with Gainsbourg, she began a hugely successful partnership with Berger in 1974 and would go on to marry the songwriter two years later in a relationship that would be marked by tragedy.
He died of a heart attack aged 44 in 1992 and the eldest of their two children, daughter Pauline, who was born with cystic fibrosis, passed away five years later.
Gall disappeared from the public eye after Pauline’s death in 1997, only to reappear in 2015 for a musical stage show featuring her numerous hits with her late husband.
Gall is seen in this file photo taken on October 30, 2012.