Film complete avec patrick bruel biography
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Patrick Bruel
French singer-songwriter, actor, and poker player (born 1959)
Patrick Benguigui (French pronunciation:[patʁikbɛnɡiɡi]; born 14 May 1959), better known by his stage name Patrick Bruel (pronounced[patʁikbʁyɛl]), is a French singer-songwriter, actor and professional poker player.
Biography
[edit]Early life
[edit]Patrick is the son of Pierre Benguigui and Augusta Kammoun, daughter of Elie and Céline ben Sidoun.[citation needed] He lived in the staff accommodation of the girls' school in Argenteuil where his mother was a teacher.[4] In his youth, Bruel aspired to be a football player, but decided instead to pursue singing after seeing Michel Sardou in 1975.
Acting and music careers
[edit]His first success came as an actor, in 1979's Le Coup de sirocco. He continued acting in films, on television, and in the theater while pursuing his singing career. His first single, "Vide" ("Empty"), released in 1982, was not a s
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French postcard by Editions F. Nugeron. Photo: Richard Berryand Patrick Bruelin L'Union Sacrée/Brothers in Arms(Alexandre Arcady, 1989).
French Postcard, no. S 2.
French Postcard, no. A010.
A million screaming girls
Patrick Bruel was born Patrick Maurice Benguiguiin Tlemcen (a town near Oran) in French Algeria (now Algeria), in 1959. He is the son of Pierre Benguiguiand Augusta Kammoun. His family became French in 1870 when the Crémieux Decree granted full French citize
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Actor and singer Patrick Bruel was one of France’s biggest stars during the ’90s, first making his name as a teen idol and leading a return to traditional French chanson in the new millennium. Bruel was born Patrick Benguigui in Tlemcen, Algeria, on May 14, 1959. His father abandoned the family when Patrick was only a year old, and in 1962, after Algeria won its independence, his mother moved to France, settling in the Paris suburb of Argenteuil. A fine soccer player in his youth, Patrick first settled on the idea of being a singer after seeing Michel Sardou perform in 1975. As luck would have it, acting would bring him his first success; first-time director Alexandre Arcady ran an ad seeking a young man with a French-Algerian (or “pied-noir” in French slang) accent for his film Le Coup de Sirocco. Benguigui (as he was still called) responded and won the part. The following year, he spent some time in New York City, where he met Gérard Presgurvic, later to