Camille

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  • Born: Paris, France
  • Years Active: 2000s

Albums

Biography All Music Guide Wikipedia

All Music Guide:

French pop chanteuse Camille attracted international attention as a member of the acclaimed Nouvelle Vague before resuming her solo career. Born Camille Dalmais in Paris in 1978, she focused on ballet throughout adolescence while developing a passion for bossa nova and American stage musicals. At 16, she performed an original song, "Un Homme Déserté," at a wedding and from that point forward embraced songwriting, channeling influences including '60s folk and '70s soul. While taking vocal lessons Camille began playing Paris jazz clubs, and in 2001 she made her professional acting debut in the film Les Morsures de l'Aube, contributing the song "La Vie la Nuit" to its soundtrack. At the same time her demo tape entered circulation, and upon signing to the Virgin subsidiary Source, she began work on her 2002 debut LP, Le Sac de Filles, a critical and commercial success buoyed by the single "Demeure d'un Ciel."

In April 2004 Camille joined producers Marc Collin and Olivier Libaux in Nouvelle Vague, a project dedicated to bossa nova-influenced cover renditions of new wave and post-punk classics. She contributed four lead vocals to the LP, including renditions of the Clash's "The Guns of Brixton" and the Dead Kennedys' "Too Drunk to Fuck," and was a featured performer on the subsequent European tour in support of the album. Camille returned to her solo career in early 2005 with her sophomore effort, Le Fil, which fell just shy of the French Top Ten thanks to the success of its lead single, "Ta Douleur." The disc ended up winning Best New Album of the Year honors at the annual Victoires de la Musique awards, where she also earned the title of Breakthrough Live Act. Days later, Camille issued her third LP, the 2005 concert set Live au Trianon.

Wikipedia:

Camille may refer to :

Camille (given name), a male or female given name

In the arts

Camille or The Lady of the Camellias, an 1852 novel and play by Alexandre Dumas, filsCamille (ballet), made famous by Margot Fonteyn's interpretation of the title characterCamille (opera), a 1929 opera by Hamilton ForrestCamille (Charles Ludlam play), a parody by Charles LudlamCamille (play) translation and adaptation by Matilda Heron of La dame aux camelias by Alexandre Dumas, filsCamille, an 1866 painting by Claude Monet, also known as The Woman in the Green DressCamille (singer), French singer and songwriter
Films
Camille (1915 film), a 1915 English language silent filmCamille (1917 film), a 1917 American silent film starring Theda BaraCamille (1921 film), a 1921 American silent film starring Alla Nazimova, Rudolph Valentino, Rex Cherryman and Patsy Ruth MillerCamille (1927 film), a 1926 American silent film starring Norma Talmadge and Gilbert RolandCamille (Barton film), a 1926 New York/Paris madcap party film by Ralph Barton starring, among others, Paul Robeson, Charlie Chaplin, Paul Claudel, Theodore Dreiser, Dorothy Gish, and Sinclair LewisCamille (1936 film), a 1936 Academy Award nominated American film starring Greta Garbo and Robert TaylorCamille (1984 film), a 1984 television film starring Greta Scacchi and Colin FirthCamille 2000, a 1969 Italian filmCamille (2007 film), a 2007 horror comedy film starring Sienna Miller and James Franco

Other

"Camille" (Red Dwarf), an episode from series 4 of Red DwarfHurricane Camille, one of the most destructive storms to make landfall in the United StatesCamille, an unreleased project by the musician Prince