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Frédéric François

Acting Born Jun 3, 1950 Lercara Friddi, Sicily, Italy 24 credits

Biography

Frédéric François (born Francesco Barracato; 3 June 1950 in Lercara Friddi, Sicily, Italy), is a French-speaking singer-composer living in Belgium.

Born on 3 June 1950 in Lercara Friddi in Sicily, in a very modest Italian family, he is the second child of Antonina (Nina) Salemi and Giuseppe (Peppino) Barracato. His mother was a seamstress in Lercara and his father was initially a miner in a sulphur mine in Lercara. He emigrated to Belgium in the coal basin of Liège, where he signed a three-year contract as a miner. In 1951, Nina and her two sons joined Giuseppe in Tilleur in a Red Cross Convoy. Francesco Barracato grew up in a family of eight children. Peppino used to sing Neapolitan songs and opera arias for pleasure and accompanied himself on the guitar. Young Francesco was only 10 when he sang O Sole Mio for the first time in public in a café frequented mostly by Sicilians in Tilleur, "Le Passage à Niveau" [The Level Crossing].

In 1963, he turned semi-professional as a singer-guitarist in a group called "Les Eperviers" [The Sparrow hawks]. He left the technical college in 1965 for the Liège conservatoire to study violin, where he took courses particularly in diction, declamation and voice.

In 1966, he joined a new group called "Les Tigres Sauvages" [Wild Tigers] and won the "Microsillon d'Argent" [Silver Microgroove Record] at the Festival of Châtelet in Belgium – a prize that included the recording of a single. He recorded two titles: “Petite fille” [Little Girl] and "”Ne pleure pas" [Don't cry], under the pseudonym of François Bara. His father bought the 500 records that were pressed and managed to sell them for jukeboxes. The winner also got to perform as a warm-up act for three confirmed artists: Johnny Hallyday, Pascal Danel and Michel Polnareff, his idol.

In 1969, his meeting with the Belgian producer Constant Defourny led to his first contract with a record company: Barclay-Belgique. He recorded “Sylvie” in July 1969, and released his first single under the name of Frédéric François, in homage to the composer Chopin, whose real first name was Frédéric-François. He gave his first performances as a solo artist in venues in the Liège region during the tour of The Best Group orchestra: he performed five of his own compositions, including Sylvie, of course. He released a new single, “Les Orgues de Saint Michel” [The Organ of Saint Michael], which was not at all successful, then another one, "Marian," accompanied by a second title "Comme tous les amoureux," [Like all people in love], which was written especially to represent Belgium at the Eurovision contest in 1970, but was not selected. ...

Source: Article "Frédéric François" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA.

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Full filmography

  • Champs-Elysées (1982) as Self
  • Vivement dimanche (1998) as Self
  • Sacrée soirée (1987) as Self
  • Les Rendez-vous du dimanche (1975) as Self
  • Midi Première (1975) as Self
  • Le monde est à vous (1987) as Self
  • Midi trente (1972) as Self
  • Samedi soir (1971) as Self
  • Fan School (1977) as Self
  • Star Academy (2001) as Self
  • Téléthon (1987) as Self
  • La Chance aux chansons (1984) as Self
  • La Chance aux chansons (1984) as Self (archive footage)
  • Système 2 (1975) as Self
  • Les Jeux de 20 heures (1976) as Self
  • Stars 90 (1990) as Self
  • Amanda (2016) as Self
  • Il était une fois Champs-Élysées (2022) as Self (archive footage)
  • Cadet Rousselle (1971) as Self
  • The Unexpected Getaway (2022) as Self
  • La Boîte à secrets (2019) as Self
  • Stars à domicile (2001) as Self
  • Les Enfoirés - Les Enfoirés en chœur de 1985 à aujourd'hui (2014)
  • Les années bonheur (2006) as Self