Jacques Joseph Victor Higelin (French pronunciation:[ʒakʒozɛfviktɔʁiʒlɛ̃]; 18 October 1940 – 6 April 2018) was a French pop singer who rose to prominence in the early 1970s.
Early life
Higelin was born on 18 October 1940. His father, Paul, a railway worker and musician of Alsatian descent, introduced his two sons to various forms of music. Their mother, Renée, was of Belgian descent, and raised both the boys.[1][2]
Higelin's entertainment career began at age 14, when he left school to work as a stunt double. While playing several minor roles in motion pictures, Higelin was taught to play the guitar by Henri Crolla, a French-Italian jazz guitarist and a composer of film scores. By the early 1960s, Higelin was attending the René Simon drama school, where he won the François Périer award.
After his mandatory two-year military service, he resumed his film career around 1963 but began to focus more on music. By the end of the decade, he had become very active in the artistic underground in Paris and began to channel his music towards radical activism.
Higelin began attracting popular attention through his live concerts, typically held in smaller venues, and released his first solo album in 1971. By the middle of the 1970s, Higelin had become one of France's most successful pop musicians, and he remains influential to this day.
In the 1970s, Higelin was in a relationship with a Vietnamese woman named Kuelan Nguyen. They had a son together.
In 1976, Nguyen accompanied Higelin during the recording of an album at the Château d'Hérouville, where Iggy Pop was also recording his debut solo album The Idiot. Pop became infatuated with Nguyen and had an affair with her. The two did not speak the same language, communicating through gestures and expressions. The incident inspired his song "China Girl", which he wrote with David Bowie. Although not successful when Pop released it, the song later became a hit when re-recorded by Bowie in 1983 for his album Let's Dance, charting in the UK and the United States.[3][4]
Personal life and death
Higelin had three children, each by a different woman. They all became artists:
Arthur H, singer, born to Nicole Courtois in 1966[5]