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"He has a deliciously brazen style
and impeccable stagecraft, which let's him summon up Dietrich
without erasing himself." "Hermon's performance was nothing
less than astonishing... He was simply magnificent." "Love's voice ". With a calm
arrogance, Michel Hermon steps across irony, touches the right
chord, deep down, where anguish brings a lump to one's throat,
where happiness suddenly becomes a reality." ---------------------------------------- Evoking her fabulous silouette and indefatigable legend, French poet Jean Cocteau says: "She's got a name that starts like a caress and ends up like a whipping". He was so right. Mystery and glamour are the first things that come to mind when the name MARLENE DIETRICH is mentioned. First, MICHEL HERMON sang french
legend Edith Piaf, then anarchist MARLENE DIETRICH always was much more than simply a "Star", more than only an actress or singer - since the beginning of her amazing career she was a trendsetter who created style and fashion, and - most importantly - she lives on as a cultural symbol. A symbol of the decadence of the 1920s, a symbol of glamour and beauty, a symbol of anti-fascism, a symbol of survival and a symbol of sexual freedom. DIETRICH was both masculine and feminine. She was nicknamed "the best dressed man in Hollywood". She crossed the borders of the gender like no other star before her. In her US debut film Morocco (1930), she introduced herself to American audiences as a completely independent woman from nowhere who dressed like a man, kisses a woman and makes Gary Cooper her "girlfriend". This is the image of DIETRICH everybody knows. Androgyny remained one of the most important parts of her everlasting myth. MARLENE herself thought the best description of her image was made by Kenneth Tynan who said: "She has sex - but no particular gender". Without doubt: Tynan was right. When you listen to - Dietrich Hotel
- you'll understand why MARLENE is such a perfect
character for MICHEL HERMON to play. From song to song,
he offers a lovingly swinging tribute that is not only nostalgic
but contemporary and thoroughly entertaining. Accompanied on
piano by the brilliant Neal Kirkwood (from San Francisco),
HERMON interprets The Blonde Venus's well known anthems
such as "Johnny", "Black Market",
Born in Paris, MICHEL HERMON now lives in New York City and boasts an impressive resumé which encompasses theater, theatrical direction, concert and opera. He now devotes his time entirely to cabaret singing.
Bis bald, Marlene Bis bald |

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Mandalay Je ne t'aime pas The Laziest Gal in Town |
padam l'homme a la moto la foule |