Nana Mouskouri

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Mention the name Nana Mouskouri today in America, and someone is sure to ask, "Is that the woman with the glasses?" After over 30 years of European singing stardom, Nana Mouskouri is finally becoming known and recognized in the United States, and her trademark hairstyle and dark-rimmed glasses are becoming as familiar as her voice and sincerity. At an age when many singers retire, Mouskouri is still gaining new audiences and making new friends.

Nana Mouskouri first learned to sing from the movies. Her father was a movie projectionist, and when she was a child, her family lived behind the outdoor screen of their open-air theater. "So I grew up behind the big screen, listening to the music," she told the Detroit Free Press."From the age of three or four, I heard the film music. Because I loved the music so much, I was inspired [to become a singer]." Her earliest influences were American popular singers. "I learned to sing in English from Judy Garland and Billie Holiday," she continued in the same interview.

As much as she loved pop, Mouskouri’s earliest formal musical training was in classical music; she spent nine years studying classical singing at the Athens Conservatory. She continued to sing pop, jazz, and folk songs as well, much to her music professors’ chagrin. They eventually told her to choose between pop and classical, for they did not believe anyone could sing both. In 1959 after winning the first Greek Song Festival, she opted for pop, and made her first record later that same year.

Mouskouri’s early career coincided with an international interest in Greek popular music, due in part to the success of the movie Never on Sunday, the soundtrack of which contained several songs by the Greek composer Manos Hadjidakis. Hadjidakis wrote a number of songs for Mouskouri, including "White Rose of Athens," recorded in 1961, which became her first record to sell over one million copies.

In the early 1960s Mouskouri signed with the recording company Philips-Fontana France and moved to Paris. Her fame quickly spread throughout Europe. With her husband, guitarist George Petsilas, she formed the group the Athenians and began touring all over the world. "I became for Europe the first singer who both opened and closed an evening, alone with her musicians," she wrote in her autobiography. "I worked very hard and my popularity grew internationally."

She toured not only Europe, but other countries and continents, including Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Malaysia, Thailand, Mexico, and the United States; she appeared on television specials, and even had her own

series in London. She received requests for royal command performances, and her concerts continually sold out. Her albums usually went platinum or gold. In 1975 she was awarded a wall of 100 gold and platinum records by Phonogram Philips Paris; by the early 1990s, she had received over 250 gold and platinum records. Her numerous awards include France’s Grand Prix du Disque, the Golden Tulip Award in Holland, and the Golden Ticket Award in Germany for selling more than 100,000 seats in one year.

One of Mouskouri’s popular appeals is the vast variety of songs she sings. "Music has so many faces, styles, different expressions," she told the Detroit Free Press."When I started off, I was influenced by the classical singers and the Greek singers. But I also like rock and roll. I can go for [pop singer] Annie Lennox, [or the group] Dire Straits. I like jazz very much, and I love traditional music. I have sung traditional Greek songs, children’s songs, German, English, Welsh, Irish, I have done Scottish folk songs."

She performs with equal ease the aria "Casta Diva" from Bellini’s opera Norma, the spiritual "Amazing Grace," and Elvis Presley’s "Love Me Tender." She tallied up more songs in her autobiography: "I have also sung songs of the Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Kris Kristofferson, James Taylor, Tom Paxton, Dolly Parton, Cat Stevens, Bette Midler, Serge Lama, Jacques Brel, Charles Aznavour, Edith Piaf, Marlene Dietrich, Neil Young, Neil Sedaka, John Denver, Judy Garland, Ella Fitzgerald, Nat ‘King’ Cole, Carole King, and Don McLean."

Mouskouri also sings most of her songs in their original language. Early in her career, she traveled extensively and found to no surprise that her fans preferred to hear their songs in their own language. She also wanted to talk to them, so she started learning languages. "I started to travel in the 1960s and I needed to explain my songs. I said to myself that if I want to be serious about this, I have to learn the languages," she told the Washington Post."So I learned on stage. I would travel with a heavy bag of language books. Today it’s so easy—I feel at home in Holland, Belgium … in Italy." In any one concert, she might sing in any of a number of languages, including Spanish, French, and Hebrew as well as English and her native Greek. While on tour in Japan, she even sang a few songs in Japanese. The language seems to matter less than the meaning of the words.

"Success for me was always based on communicating with my audience, honesty and feelings," she wrote in her autobiography. "I always have expressed my feelings, my hopes my expectations, and the love I need to live. Sometimes I have also given words to my anger, my fear and my doubts." For Mouskouri, the most important aspect of a song is the meaning. "When I sing a song, I need to tell a story," she told the Washington Free Press."I need to feel strongly about what I’m singing. If the song doesn’t come from the heart, I can not sing it." Because songs combine music and poetry, the meaning can be unique. "The magic of a song is to belong to every one at the same time for different reasons," she continued in her autobiography. "To make you dream, and create your own reality in order to find your own truth and freedom in it."

In the early 1990s American fans finally began to appreciate and understand the magic of Nana Mouskouri. Although she started touring in the U.S. in the early 1960s, and has toured here more than ten times since then, she never spent enough time here to develop a large audience. With her release of the English-language album Only Love in 1993, however, she decided to change this.

With the support of her American label Polygram, she set off on a 34-city North American tour, selling out performances and garnering rave reviews. Although some have criticized her soft-pop material for being too syrupy, others care less about the type of songs she sings than about how she sings them. As music critic Paul Robicheau wrote in the Boston Globe, "When you possess a full, shimmering soprano like Mouskouri’s, you could practically sing the phone book, and leave an audience in bliss." Finally Americans have begun to figure out what the Europeans have seemed to know all along.

Selected discography
Over and Over, Fontanel, 1969.Turn on the Sun, Verve, 1971.Passport, Mercury, 1976.Vielles chansons de France, Verve, 1978.Roses & Sunshine, Philips, 1979.Nana(1) Verve, 1984.Alone, Verve, 1986.Libertad, Mercury, 1986.Ma Vérité, Verve, 1986.Why Worry, 1986.Tierra Viva, Mercury, 1986.Par Amour, Verve, 1987.Je Chante Avec Toi Liberté, Verve, 1988.The Magic of Nana Mouskouri, Verve, 1988.Nana in English, Verve, 1988.Nana (II), Verve, 1989.The Classical Nana, Philips, 1990.Oh Happy Day, Verve, 1991.Only Love, Philips, 1991.Falling in Love Again, Philips, 1993.Nuestras Canciones, Polygram Latino, 1993.

Sources
Books
Gammond, Peter, The Oxford Companion to Popular Music, Oxford University Press, 1991.
The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music, edited by Colin Larkin, Guinness Publishing, Ltd., 1992.
Hardy, Phil, and Dave Laing, The Faber Companion to 20th-century Popular Music, Faberand Faber, 1990.
Mouskouri, Nana, Nana Mouskouri, 1993.

Periodicals
Boston Globe, May 5, 1993.
Detroit Free Press, May 7, 1993.
Variety, August 22, 1984; June 15, 1988.
Washington Post, September 15, 1991.
  • Genres: Vocal Music

Biography

Globally speaking, Nana Mouskouri is the biggest-selling female artist of all time. Her fluency in multiple languages -- Greek, French, English, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese -- enabled her to reach audiences all over Europe, the Americas, and even Asia. Possessed of a distinctive, angelic soprano -- the product of having been born with only one vocal cord -- Mouskouri was sometimes described as Europe's answer to Barbra Streisand. Her repertoire was varied enough to support the universal appeal she aimed for: jazz standards, well-known pop tunes from before and after the rock era, French cabaret chansons, movie songs, classical and operatic repertory, religious music, folk songs from her native Greece and elsewhere, and more. Television ads for Mouskouri collections (a major North American marketing tool) leave the impression that her chief strength was interpreting familiar songs in that lovely voice; however, her early fame in Europe was built largely on songs written for and associated with her, most notably her first hit, "The White Rose of Athens." She was particularly successful in her eventual adopted home of France, where her trademark large black glasses were viewed as highly unorthodox visual style. Mouskouri recorded steadily from the 1960s into the new millennium, tailoring specific releases to specific international markets with tremendous success. Ioana Mouskouri (Joanna in English; nicknamed "Nana" from a young age) was born October 13, 1934, on the island of Crete, in the town of Chania (or Carée in French). Her father worked as a movie projectionist, and moved the family to Athens when she was three. Much of her childhood was colored by the Nazi occupation of Greece -- during which time her father worked for the resistance movement -- and the four-year civil war that broke out on the heels of World War II. She started taking singing lessons at age 12, and listened regularly to radio broadcasts of American jazz singers (Frank Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald, and Billie Holiday in particular) and French chanson stars (Edith Piaf, etc.). In 1950, Mouskouri was accepted into the Athens Conservatory, where she studied classical music with an emphasis on singing opera. In 1957, it was discovered that Mouskouri had been singing with a jazz group by night, and she was summarily kicked out of the Conservatory. Mouskouri began singing jazz in nightclubs, concentrating especially on Ella Fitzgerald repertory. In 1958, she met the emerging songwriter Manos Hadjidakis, who would become her mentor in the field of popular music, and recorded an EP featuring four of his compositions for a small record label that year. The following year she performed his "Kapou Iparchi Agapi Mou" (co-written with poet Nikos Gatsos) at the inaugural Greek Song Festival; it won first prize, and Mouskouri's high-profile performance began to make a name for her. At the 1960 festival, she performed two more Hadjidakis compositions, "Timoria" and "Kiparissaki," which tied for first prize; not long after, she made her first appearance outside of Greece at the Mediterranean Song Festival, held in Barcelona. She performed the Kostas Yannidis composition "Xypna Agapi Mou," which again won first prize, and attracted interest from several international record companies. She wound up signing with the Paris-based Philips-Fontana axis. In 1961, Mouskouri sang on the soundtrack of a German documentary about Greece, which resulted in the German-language single "Weisse Rosen aus Athen" ("The White Rose of Athens"). Adapted from a folk melody by Manos Hadjidakis, it was an enormous hit, selling over a million copies in Germany; later translated into several different languages, it went on to become one of her signature tunes. In 1962, she met producer Quincy Jones, who flew her to New York to record an album of American standards titled The Girl From Greece Sings; not long after, she had a sizable U.K. hit with the pop standard "My Colouring Book." In 1963, she settled permanently in Paris and recorded a Greek-language album; she also sang Luxembourg's entry in the Eurovision Song Contest that year, "À Force de Prier," which became an international hit, and helped win her the prestigious Grand Prix du Disque in France. She attracted the notice of composer Michel Legrand, who supplied her with two major French hits in "Les Parapluies de Cherbourg" (1964) and "L'Enfant au Tambour" (1965). Also in 1965, she recorded her second English-language album in America, Nana Sings, and found a patron in Harry Belafonte, who brought her on tour with him through 1966, and teamed with her for the live duo album An Evening With Belafonte/Mouskouri. Mouskouri ascended to superstardom in France with her 1967 album Le Jour Où la Colombe, which featured much of the core of her French repertoire: "Au Coeur de Septembre," "Adieu Angélina," "Robe Bleue, Robe Blanche," and a cover of the French pop classic "Le Temps des Cerises," among others. Also scoring with a version of "Guantanamera," she made her first headlining appearance at Paris' legendary Olympia concert theater that year, with a repertoire blending French pop, Greek folk, and Manos Hadjidakis numbers. The following year, she turned her attention to the British market, hosting a variety series called Nana and Guests; in 1969, she released her first full-length British LP, Over and Over, a smash hit that spent almost two years on the charts. Already maintaining a heavy international touring schedule in the late '60s, Mouskouri spent much of the '70s on the road, broadening her worldwide popularity to levels rarely equaled. In France, she released a series of top-selling albums that included Comme un Soleil, Une Voix Qui Vient du Coeur, Vielles Chansons de France, and Quand Tu Chantes, among others; she also recorded a successful version of "Habanera," from Bizet's opera Carmen, in tandem with Serge Lama. Elsewhere, her 1975 album Sieben Schwarze Rosen was a significant success in Germany, and her English-language album Book of Songs sold millions of copies worldwide. Mouskouri had another English-language triumph with 1979's Roses and Sunshine, which was particularly popular in Canada. She scored a worldwide hit with 1981's "Je Chante Avec Toi, Liberté," which was translated into several languages after its widespread success in France, and also helped boost her hit German album Meine Lieder Sind Meine Liebe. In 1984, Mouskouri returned to Greece for her first live performance in her homeland since 1962; from then on, she would record Greek-language albums for her home market. In 1986, Mouskouri recorded "Only Love," the theme song to a BBC TV series that went on to top the U.K. charts; it was also a hit in the French translation "L'Amour en Héritage." That same year, Mouskouri made a play for the Spanish-language market with the hit single "Con Todo el Alma," a major success in Spain, Argentina, and Chile. She released five albums in different languages in 1987, and the following year returned to her classical conservatory roots with the double LP The Classical Nana (aka Nana Classique), which featured some of her favorite opera excerpts. Mouskouri's 1991 English-language compilation Only Love: The Best of Nana Mouskouri became her best-selling release in the United States, which had long been the toughest market for her to crack. She spent much of the '90s continuing her rigorous global touring schedule, while recording regularly in French, German, Spanish, English, and Greek. Among her early-'90s albums were the spirituals collection Gospel (1990), the Spanish-language Nuestras Canciones, the multilingual, Mediterranean-themed Côté Sud, Côté Coeur (1992), the self-explanatory Falling in Love Again: Great Songs From the Movies (which reunited her with Harry Belafonte on two songs), and the French Dix Mille Ans Encore. She also dedicated herself to public works, becoming a spokesperson for UNICEF in 1993 and gaining election to the European Parliament as a Greek representative from 1994-1999. She recorded several more albums over 1996-1997, including the Spanish-language Nana Latina (which featured duets with Julio Iglesias and Mercedes Sosa), the English-language Return to Love, and the French pop classics set Hommages. In 1997, she staged a high-profile Concert for Peace at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York; it was later released as an album, and aired as a TV special on PBS in America. Meanwhile, a number of Mouskouri retrospectives appeared overseas, including elaborate box sets in both France and Germany. She continued her extensive international touring into the new millennium. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi
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Nana Mouskouri

Nana Mouskouri in 2006
Background information
Birth name Ιωάννα Μούσχουρη (Ioánna Moúschouri)
Born (1934-10-13) October 13, 1934 (age 77)
Origin Chania, Crete, Greece
Genres Jazz, Pop, Folk, Greek folk, World music, Classical
Occupations Singer
Years active 1958–2008, 2011–present
Labels Fontana, Polydor, Mercury, Verve, Philips, PolyGram, Universal Music France
Website Universal Music France

Nana Mouskouri (Greek: Nάνα Μούσχουρη, pronounced [ˈnana ˈmusxuɾi]), born Iōánna Moúschouri (Greek: Ιωάννα Μούσχουρη, [ioˈana ˈmusxuɾi] on October 13, 1934, in Chania, Crete, Greece) is a Greek singer who has sold 300 million records worldwide in a career spanning over five decades[1][2], which makes her one of the top-selling female singers of all time. Known as "Nána" to her friends and family as a child (note that in Greek her surname is pronounced with the stress on the first syllable - MOOS-hoo-ree - rather than the second), she has recorded songs in many languages, including Greek, French, English, German, Dutch, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish, Hebrew, Welsh, Mandarin Chinese, Maori and Turkish.

Contents

The early years

Nana Mouskouri's family lived in Chania, Crete, where her father, Constantine, worked as a film projectionist in a local cinema. Her mother, Alice, also worked in the same local cinema as an usherette. When Mouskouri was three, her family moved to Athens.

Mouskouri's family sent her and her elder sister, Eugenía or "Jenny", to the Athens Conservatoire. Mouskouri had displayed exceptional musical talent from the age of six. Jenny initially appeared to be the more gifted of the two sisters. Financially unable to support both girls' studies, the parents asked their tutor which one should continue. The tutor conceded that Jenny had the better voice, but Nana was the one with the true inner need to sing. Mouskouri has said that a medical examination revealed a difference in her two vocal cords and this could well account for her remarkable singing voice (in her younger years ranging from a husky, dark alto, which she later dropped, to a ringing coloratura mezzo), as opposed to her breathy, raspy speaking voice.[3]

Mouskouri's childhood was marked by the German Nazi occupation of Greece. Her father became part of the anti-Nazi resistance movement in Athens. Mouskouri began singing lessons at age 12. As a child, she listened to radio broadcasts of singers such as Frank Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald, Billie Holiday, and Édith Piaf.

In 1950, she was accepted at the Conservatoire. She studied classical music with an emphasis on singing opera. After eight years at the Conservatoire, Mouskouri was encouraged by her friends to experiment with jazz music. She began singing with her friends' jazz group at night. However, when Mouskouri's Conservatory professor found out about Mouskouri's involvement with a genre of music that was not in keeping with her classical studies, he prevented her from sitting for her end-of-year exams.[citation needed] During an episode of "Joanna Lumley's Greek Odyssey", shown on the UK ITV channel in the autumn of 2011, Mouskouri told the actress Joanna Lumley of how she had been scheduled to sing at the amphitheatre at Epidauros with other students of the Conservatoire, when upon arrival at the amphitheatre word came through from the Conservatoire in Athens that she had just been barred from participating in the performance there due to her involvement in light music. Mouskouri subsequently left the Conservatoire and began performing at the Zaki club in Athens.

She began singing jazz in nightclubs with a bias towards Ella Fitzgerald repertoire. In 1957, she recorded her first song, Fascination, in both Greek and English for Odeon/EMI Greece. By 1958 while still performing at the Zaki, she met Greek composer Manos Hadjidakis. Hadjidakis was impressed by Nana’s voice and offered to write songs for her. In 1959 Mouskouri performed Hadjidakis' Kapou Iparchi I Agapi Mou (co-written with poet Nikos Gatsos) at the inaugural Greek Song Festival. The song won first prize, and Mouskouri began to be noticed.

At the 1960 Greek Song Festival, she performed two more Hadjidakis compositions, Timōría ("Punishment") and Kyparissáki ("Little cypress"). Both these songs tied for first prize. Mouskouri performed Kostas Yannidis' composition, Xypna Agapi Mou ("Wake up, my love"), at the Mediterranean Song Festival, held in Barcelona that year. The song won first prize, and she went on to sign a recording contract with Paris-based Philips-Fontana.

In 1961, Mouskouri performed the soundtrack of a German documentary about Greece. This resulted in the German-language single Weiße Rosen aus Athen ("White Roses from Athens"). The song was originally adapted from a folk melody by Hadjidakis. It became a success, selling over a million copies in Germany. The song was later translated into several languages and it went on to become one of Mouskouri's signature tunes.

Family life

Mouskouri has been married twice: firstly at 25, to Yorgos (George) Petsilas[4], a guitarist in her backing band (the trio "The Athenians") and the first man she'd kissed. They had two children (Nicolas Petsilas in 1968 and Hélène (Lénou) Petsilas (singer) in 1970) but divorced when Mouskouri was 39.[5] Not long after that, she met her second husband, André Chapelle, then her sound technician, but they did not marry then because she 'didn't want to bring another father into the family' and divorce was against her traditional Greek upbringing.[5] They eventually married on 13 January 2003, and live primarily in Switzerland.

Life outside Greece

In 1962, she met Quincy Jones, who persuaded her to travel to New York City to record an album of American jazz titled The Girl from Greece Sings. Following that she scored another hit in the United Kingdom with My Colouring Book.

In 1963 she left Greece to live in Paris, where she formed close frienships with the singer-songwriter Barbara and other leaders of French chanson.[6] Mouskouri performed Luxembourg's entry in the Eurovision Song Contest 1963 that year, À Force de Prier. The song achieved success, and helped win her the prestigious Grand Prix du Disque in France. Mouskouri soon attracted the attention of French composer Michel Legrand, who composed for her two major French hits Les Parapluies de Cherbourg (1964) and an arrangement of Katherine K. Davis' Carol of the Drum, L'Enfant au Tambour (1965).

In 1965 she recorded her second English-language album to be released in the United States, entitled Nana Sings. American calypso musician Harry Belafonte heard and liked the album. Belafonte brought Mouskouri on tour with him through 1966. They teamed for a live duo album entitled An Evening With Belafonte/Mouskouri. During this tour, Belafonte suggested that Mouskouri remove her signature black-rimmed glasses when on stage. She was so unhappy with the request that she wanted to quit the show after only two days. Finally, Belafonte relented and respected her wishes to perform while wearing glasses.[7]

Mouskouri's 1967 French album Le Jour Où la Colombe raised her to super-stardom in France. This album featured many of her French songs, Au Cœur de Septembre, Adieu Angélina, Robe Bleue, Robe Blanche and the French pop classic Le Temps des Cerises. Mouskouri made her first appearance at Paris' legendary Olympia concert theatre the same year, singing French pop, Greek folk, and Hadjidakis numbers.

In 1968, Mouskouri was invited to host a BBC TV series called Presenting Nana Mouskouri. The next year she released a full-length British LP, Over and Over. The LP spent almost two years in the UK charts. She expanded her concert tour to Australia (where she met Frank Hardy, who followed her to the south of France in 1976), New Zealand and Japan. She recorded several Japanese songs for the Japanese market.

In France, she released a series of top-selling albums that included Comme un Soleil, Une Voix Qui Vient du Cœur, Vieilles Chansons de France, and Quand Tu Chantes!.

Middle years

In 1979, Mouskouri released another English-language album named Roses and Sunshine. This album consisting largely of folk and country material, and included work from sources as Neil Young, Dolly Parton, Bob Dylan and John Denver. It was well received in Canada, and one of the album's tracks, "Even Now" (not the same song as the 1978 Barry Manilow hit), became a staple on beautiful music radio stations in the United States. She scored a worldwide hit in 1981 with Je Chante Avec Toi, Liberté, which was translated into several languages after its success in France. The momentum from this album also helped boost her following German album, Meine Lieder sind mein Leben. In 1984, Mouskouri returned to Greece for her first live performance in her homeland since 1962.

In 1985, Mouskouri recorded Only Love, the theme song to the BBC TV series Mistral's Daughter — based upon the novel by Judith Krantz — that reached #2 in the UK charts. The song was also a hit in its foreign language versions: L'Amour en Héritage (French), Come un'eredità (Italian), La dicha del amor (Spanish), and Aber die Liebe bleibt (German). The German version was also recorded with an alternate set of lyrics under the title Der wilde Wein but was withdrawn in favour of Aber die Liebe bleibt.

That same year, Mouskouri made a play for the Spanish-language market with the hit single Con Todo el Alma. The song was a major success in Spain, Argentina and Chile.

She released five albums in different languages in 1987, and the following year returned to her classical conservatory roots with the double LP The Classical Nana (aka Nana Classique), which featured adaptations of classical songs and excerpts from opera. By the end of 1987, she had performed a series of concerts in Asia, including South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, Hong Kong, Malaysia and Thailand.

Autobiography

A French language autobiography appeared in 1989 titled "Chanter ma vie" (Singing my life), which is also the title of her French version of ABBA's "I Have a Dream".

In 2006, Greek publisher A.A. Livanis published a biography in Greek titled "To onoma mou ine Nana" (My name is Nana). In autumn 2007, the French and English versions of this biography appeared under the titles "Nana Mouskouri — Memoires — La fille de la Chauve-souris" (XO publishers) and "Nana Mouskouri — Memoirs" (Orion Publishing Group).[8]

The later years

Mouskouri's 1991 English album, Only Love: The Best of Nana Mouskouri became her best-selling release in the United States. She spent much of the 1990s touring the globe. Among her early 1990s albums were spiritual music, Gospel (1990), the Spanish-language Nuestras Canciones, the multilingual, Mediterranean-themed Côté Sud, Côté Coeur (1992), Dix Mille Ans Encore, Falling in Love Again: Great Songs From the Movies. Falling in Love featured two duets with Harry Belafonte.

In 1993, Mouskouri recorded the album, Hollywood. Produced by Michel Legrand it was a collection of famous songs from films, and served not only as a tribute to the world of cinema, but also as a personal reference to childhood memories of sitting with her father in his projection room in Crete.[citation needed]

She recorded several more albums over 1996 and 1997, including the Spanish Nana Latina (which featured duets with Julio Iglesias and Mercedes Sosa), the English-language Return to Love, and the French pop classics, Hommages. In 1997, she staged a high-profile Concert for Peace at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York. This concert was later released as an album, and aired as a TV special on PBS in the U.S.

UNICEF/Politics

Mouskouri was appointed as a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador in 1993

Mouskouri was appointed a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador in October 1993.[9] She took over from the previous ambassador, the recently deceased actress Audrey Hepburn. Mouskouri's first U.N. mission took her to Bosnia to draw attention to the plight of children affected by Bosnian war. She went on to give a series of fund-raising concerts in Sweden and Belgium.

She was elected a Member of the European Parliament from 1994 until 1999, when she resigned from her position as an MEP. Several reasons have been given for this, one being her pacifism, and another being that she felt ill-equipped for the day-to-day work of a politician.[10]

21st century and retirement

Mouskouri lives in Switzerland with Chapelle, and, until her final performance in 2008, performed hundreds of concerts every year throughout her career. In 2004, her French record company released a 34-CD box set of more than 600 of Mouskouri's mostly-French songs. In 2006 she made a guest appearance at that year's Eurovision Song Contest which was held, for the first time ever, in her native Greece.

The ancient Herodes Atticus Theatre, in Athens, Greece.

In the same year, she announced her plans to retire. From 2005 until 2008, she conducted a farewell concert tour of Europe, Australia, New Zealand, Asia, South America, the United States, and Canada. On July 23 and 24, 2008, Mouskouri gave her two final 'Farewell Concert' performances at the ancient Herodes Atticus Theatre, in Athens, Greece, before a packed stadium, including Greece's Prime Minister and Athens mayor, plus the mayors of Berlin, Paris and Luxembourg, along with fans from around the world and thousands of her Athenian admirers.[1]

In 2010, in response to the financial situation in Greece caused by excessive deficit,[11] Mouskouri announced that she would forgo her pension to contribute to the country's recovery. She commented: "Everywhere I see stories about my country going bankrupt. And people are aggressive about it. It's frightening. And it's painful for me. Nobody wants their country to be treated badly. It's frustrating and very sad."[5]

In late 2011 Mouskouri released two newly-recorded CDs, the first featuring songs of the Greek Islands, recorded with other Greek singers, and the second featuring duets with French contemporaries. In late November 2011 Mouskouri sang again at single one-off concert, with guests, in Berlin, commemorating the 50th anniversary of her hit single "The White Rose of Athens".[12] Dates of a multi-city tour of Germany in early 2012 have also been announced.

Record sales

Universal Music Group, which has over the decades come to acquire virtually all the labels under which Mouskouri recorded, claims that Nana Mouskouri has sold nearly 400 million discs worldwide,[1][13] recording about 1,500 songs in 15 languages on 450 albums. She has more than 230 gold and platinum albums worldwide, making her a candidate for the best-selling female recording artist of all time.[2]

Impersonators

The British comedian Benny Hill impersonated Mouskouri on The Benny Hill Show. He wore long dresses and long black hair, that he stroked back, and talked and sang with a slow and quiet voice. He described the songs with long and verbose introductions before singing them.[14]

Partial discography

  • Epitaphios (1960)
  • Nana Mouskouri Canta canciones populares griegas (1960)
  • I megales epitichies tis Nana Mouskouri (Η μεγάλες επιτυχίες της Νάνας Μούσχουρης) (1961)
  • Ta prota mas tragoudia (Τα πρώτα μας τραγούδια) (1961)
  • Weiße Rosen aus Athen / The White Rose of Athens (1961)
  • Greece, Land of Dreams (1962)
  • The Girl from Greece (1962)
  • Roses Blanches de Corfu (1962)
  • Ce Soir à Luna Park (1962)
  • Crois-moi ça durera (1962)
  • Un homme est venu (1963)
  • Sings Greek Songs-Never on Sunday (1963)
  • Au Feu! (1964)
  • Celui que j'aime (1964)
  • Ich Schau Den Weissen Wolken Nach (1964)
  • The Voice of Greece (1964)
  • Chante en Grec (1965)
  • Nana Mouskouri et Michael Legrand (1965)
  • Griechische Gitarren mit Nana Mouskouri (1965)
  • Nana Mouskouri in Italia (1965)
  • Nana's Choice (1965)
  • Nana Sings (1965)
  • An Evening with Belafonte/Mouskouri (1966)
  • Le Cœur trop tendre (1966)
  • Strasse der hunderttausend Lichter (1966)
  • Nana Mouskouri in Paris (1966)
  • In Italia (1966)
  • Moje Najlepse grčke pesme -Yugoslavia- (1966)
  • Pesme Moje zemlje -Yugoslavia- (1966)
  • Un Canadien Errant (1967)
  • Un souvenir du congrès (1967)
  • Nana Mouskouri à l'Olympia (1967)
  • Showboat (1967)
  • Chants de mon pays (1967)
  • Singt Ihre Grossen Erfolge (1967)
  • Le Jour où la Colombe (1967)
  • Nana (1968)
  • What Now My Love (1968)
  • Une soirée avec Nana Mouskouri (1969)
  • Dans le soleil et dans le vent (1969)
  • Over and Over (1969)
  • The Exquisite Nana Mouskouri (1969)
  • Mouskouri International (1969)
  • Grand Gala (1969)
  • Verzoekprogramma (1969)
  • Le Tournesol (1970)
  • Nana Recital 70 (1970)
  • Nana Sings Hadjidakis (Νάνα τραγουδά Μάνο Χατζιδάκη) (1970)
  • Turn On the Sun (1970)
  • Bridge Over Troubled Water (1970)
  • My Favorite Greek Songs (1970)
  • Song for Liberty (1970)
  • After Midnight (1971)
  • A Touch of French (1971)
  • Love Story (1971)
  • Pour les enfants (1971)
  • Comme un soleil (1971)
  • A Place in My Heart (1971)
  • Chante la Grèce (1972)
  • Lieder meiner Heimat (1972)
  • Xypna Agapi mou (1972)
  • Christmas with Nana Mouskouri (1972)
  • British Concert (1972)
  • Une voix... qui vivent du coeur (1972)
  • Spiti mou spitaki mou (1972)
  • Presenting... Songs from Her TV Series (1973)
  • Vieilles Chansons de France (1973)
  • Chante Noël (1973)
  • Day is Done (1973)
  • An American Album (1973)
  • Spotlight on Nana Mouskouri (1973)
  • Nana Mouskouri au Théâtre des Champs-Elysées (1974)
  • Que je sois un ange... (1974)
  • Nana's Book of Songs (1974)
  • The Most Beautiful Songs (1974)
  • Adieu mes amis (1974)
  • Le temps des cerises (1974)
  • If You Love me (1974)
  • The Magic of Nana Mouskouri (1974)
  • Sieben Schwarze Rosen (1975)
  • Toi qui t'en vas (1975)
  • Träume sind Sterne (1975)
  • At the Albert Hall (1975)
  • Quand tu chantes (1976)
  • Die Welt ist voll Licht (1976)
  • Eine Welt voll Musik (1976)
  • Lieder die mann nie vergisst (1976)
  • Nana in Holland (1976)
  • Songs of the British Isles (1976)
  • Love Goes On (1976)
  • Quand Tu Chantes (1976)
  • An Evening with Nana Mouskouri (1976)
  • Ein Portrait (1976)
  • La Récréation (1976)
  • Passport (1976)
  • The Three Bells (1976)
  • Une Voix (1976)
  • Alleluia (1977)
  • Glück ist wie ein Schmetterling (1977)
  • Star für Millionen (1977)
  • Geliebt und bewundert (1977)
  • Lieder, die die Liebe schreibt (1978)
  • Nouvelles chansons de la Vieille France (1978)
  • Les Enfants du Pirée (1978)
  • À Paris (1979)
  • Roses & Sunshine (1979)
  • Even Now (1979)
  • Vivre au Soleil (1979)
  • Sing dein Lied (1979)
  • Kinderlieder (1979)
  • Come with Me (1980)
  • Vivre avec toi (1980)
  • Die stimme in concert (1980)
  • Wenn ich träum (1980)
  • Alles Liebe (1981)
  • Je Chante Avec Toi, Liberté (1981)
  • Ballades (1982)
  • Farben (1983)
  • Quand on revient (1983)
  • When I Dream (1983)
  • La Dame de Cœur (1984)
  • Athina (1984)
  • Live at Herod Atticus (1984)
  • Nana (1984)
  • I endekati entoli (1985)
  • Ma Vérité (1985)
  • Alone (1985)
  • Libertad (1986)
  • Liberdade (1986)
  • Kleine Wahrheiten (1986)
  • Tu m'oublies (1986)
  • Why Worry? (1986)
  • Only Love (1986)
  • Love Me Tender (1987)
  • Con tutto il cuore (1987)
  • Tierra Viva (1987)
  • Du und Ich (1987)
  • Par Amour (1987)
  • Classique (1988)
  • A Voice from the Heart (1988)
  • The Magic of Nana Mouskouri (1988)
  • Concierto en Aranjuez (1989)
  • Tout Simplement 1&2 (1989)
  • Nana Mouskouri Singt die schönsten deutschen Weihnachtslieder (1989)
  • Taxidotis (1990)
  • Gospel (1990)
  • Only Love: The Best of Nana Mouskouri (1991)
  • Nuestras canciones 1 & 2 (1991)
  • Am Ziel meiner Reise (1991)
  • Côté Sud - Côté Cœur (1992)
  • Hollywood (1993)
  • Falling in Love Again: Great Songs from the Movies (1993)
  • Dix mille ans encore (1994)
  • Agapi in'i zoi (1994)
  • Nur ein Lied (1995)
  • Nana Latina (1996)
  • Hommages (1997)
  • Return to Love (1997)
  • The Romance of Nana Mouskouri (1997)
  • Concert for Peace (1998)
  • Chanter la vie (1998)
  • As Time Goes By (1999)
  • The Christmas Album (2000)
  • At Her Very Best (2001)
  • Erinnerungen (2001)
  • Songs the Whole World Loves (2001)
  • Fille du Soleil (2002)
  • Un Bolero Por Favor (2002)
  • Ode to Joy (2002)
  • The Singles+ (2002)
  • Nana Swings: Live at Jazzopen Festival (2003)
  • Ich hab'gelacht, ich hab'geweint (2004)
  • L'Intégrale Collection (34 CD Box Set) (2004)
  • A Canadian Tribute (2004)
  • I'll Remember You (2005)
  • Complete English Works Collection (17 CD Box Set) (2005)
  • Moni Perpato (2006)
  • Nana Mouskouri (Gold) (2 CD) (2006)
  • Le Ciel est Noir - Les 50 plus belles chansons (3 CD) (2007)
  • The Ultimate Collection (2007)
  • Les 100 plus belles chansons (5 CD) (2007)
  • 50 Hronia Tragoudia (50 Years of Songs) (2007)
  • Alma Latina Todas sus grabaciones en español (5CD) (2008)
  • The Best Of (Green Series) (2008)
  • The Very Best Of (Readers Digest 4 CD-Box) (2008)
  • The Ultimate Collection / In Asia (Taiwan) (2CD) (2008)
  • The Greatest Hits: Korea Tour Edition (2 CD-Box) (2008)
  • The Singer (2008)
  • Nana Mouskouri - Best Selection (2009)
  • Nana Sings (reissue) (2009)
  • Nana Mouskouri: Les hits (2009)
  • Meine Schönsten Welterfolge vol. 2 (2CD) (2009)
  • Les n°1 de Nana Mouskouri (Edition Limitée) (2CD) (2009)
  • La más completa colección (2009)
  • Nana Mouskouri I (2009)
  • Nana Mouskouri: Highlights 娜娜穆斯库莉:精选 (2010)
  • As Time Goes By (Nana Mouskouri sings the Great Movie Themes) (reissue) (2010)
  • The Danish Collection (reissue) (2010)
  • Nana Jazz (2010)
  • My 60's Favourites (2010)
  • Mes Chansons de France (2010)
  • Nana Around the World (2010)
  • Ballads and Love Songs (2010)
  • Nana Country (2010)
  • Nana Mouskouri & Friends - Tragoudia apo Ellinika nisia (Songs from the Greek Islands) (2011)
  • Nana Mouskouri & Friends - Rendez-vous (French version) (2011)
  • Nana Mouskouri & Friends - Rendez-vous (German version) (2012)
  • Nana Mouskouri & Friends - Rendez-vous (English version) (TBA)

Autobiographies

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "Mouskouri plays farewell concert". BBC. 2008-07-24. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/7523827.stm. Retrieved 2009-11-29. 
  2. ^ a b Brown, Jonathan (2007-10-26). "Going out on a song: Nana Mouskouri sets off on farewell tour after 40-year career". The Independent (London). http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/going-out-on-a-song-nana-mouskouri-sets-off-on-farewell-tour-after-40year-career-397956.html. Retrieved 2009-11-29. 
  3. ^ "Nana Mouskouri bows out in style" (Grant Smithies' interview for stuff magazine, 2005-07-31)
  4. ^ Greek songs
  5. ^ a b c 'There is a sense of revolt. I feel it too' - The Guardian, 6 March 2010
  6. ^ December 13, 2011 (2011-12-13). "Why is Nana Mouskouri on classical BBC Radio 3?". Artsjournal.com. http://www.artsjournal.com/slippeddisc/2011/12/why-is-nana-mouskouri-on-classical-bbc-radio-3.html. Retrieved 2012-04-17. 
  7. ^ Going out on a song: Nana Mouskouri sets off on farewell tour after 40-year career, Jonathan Brown, The Independent on Sunday, 26 October 2007
  8. ^ Duroy, Lionel; Nana Mouskouri; Jeremy Leggatt (2007). Memoirs. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-84469-5. 
  9. ^ "UNICEF People — Nana Mouskouri". UNICEF. http://www.unicef.org/people/people_nana_mouskouri.html. Retrieved 2008-02-19. 
  10. ^ "European Parliament: Your MEPs: Nana MOUSKOURI". European Parliament Correspondence with Citizens Unit. http://www.europarl.europa.eu/members/archive/alphaOrder/view.do?id=2183. Retrieved 2008-02-19. 
  11. ^ The EU economic situation and Greece - ECFIN - European Commission, "the [European] Council decided in April 2009 that Greece was in excessive deficit"
  12. ^ November 10, 2011 (2011-11-10). "Greece’s greatest living legend is returning to the stage". Artsjournal.com. http://www.artsjournal.com/slippeddisc/2011/11/greeces-greatest-living-legend-is-returning-to-the-stage.html. Retrieved 2012-04-17. 
  13. ^ "Biographie de Nana Mouskouri" (in French). Universal Music France. http://www.universalmusic.fr/artiste/nana--mouskouri/. Retrieved 2008-02-19. 
  14. ^ Season 3, Episode 3: Episode #3.3 IMDb.com, The Benny Hill Show (1969), Episode list.
  • (French)(English)(Spanish)
This article incorporates information from the German Wikipedia. Site québécois de Nana Mouskouri Biography, discography by language, list of 1 800 recordings, covers magazines, TV in Quebec, drawings, memories et topicalities.

External links

Official
Biographies
Discography
Filmography
Preceded by
Camillo Felgen
Luxembourg in the Eurovision Song Contest
1963
Succeeded by
Hugues Aufray



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Mentioned in

Coleccion, Vol. 3: Romantica (1998 Album by Nana Mouskouri)
Coleccion, Vol. 2: Gospel (1998 Album by Nana Mouskouri)
Coleccion, Vol. 5: Hollywood - Lo Mejor del Cine (1998 Album by Nana Mouskouri)
Coleccion, Vol. 4: Canciones Latinas (1998 Album by Nana Mouskouri)