Chantal Goya


Chantal "Goya" de Guerre is a French singer and actress.
Goya started her career as a yé-yé girl, singing a catchy mid-1960s hybrid of girl-group pop and French chanson. She also enjoyed a career as a French New Wave actress; she had a starring role as Madeleine in the 1966 Jean-Luc Godard film Masculin, féminin and in Jean-Daniel Pollet's L'amour c'est gai, l'amour c'est triste.
Since 1975, she has become mostly known as a singer for children. Together with her husband, songwriter and composer Jean-Jacques Debout, and with a talented team of designers and costume people, she does shows for and with children. The main themes are dreams and traveling. Her usual character is Marie-Rose, a mix between a maid and an older sister.

Personal life

Chantal was born in French Indochina in 1942 to French parents. During the Indochina war she moved to France with her family in 1954 and lived in the Vosges mountains, and at the beginning of the 1960s, she moved to Paris with her family. She met singer/composer Jean Jacques Debout when she was 18. The couple remain married.
After having received her baccalaureat, Chantal started studying journalism in England. During this period in Paris, one of her friends took her to the reception of Eddie Barclay's wedding. Jean-Jacques Debout was one of the artists invited to this reception. At that time, he had been recording 45 rpm records since 1957, and had received some success, like "Les boutons dorés". He was a friend of the ye-ye girl Sylvie Vartan for whom he wrote and composed the hit "Tous mes copains". In 1963, Vartan was in a relationship with the ye-ye and rock-n-roll singer Johnny Hallyday and she would marry him in 1965. Debout, who was in love with Vartan, remained single in his personal life. At this reception, he saw Chantal who was sitting at the back of the living room, and he fell in love at first sight with her. He went to tell her that she would be famous by the age of 30, have two children, and singing at the Opera. Chantal didn't believe him and went to London to finish her studies.
Upon her return in France, Debout was waiting for her at the station and sang to her a song he had written and composed when she was in England, called "Nos doigts se sont croisés", and Chantal fell in love with him. With this song, Debout participated in and won the Festival de la Rose d'Or d'Antibes.
In 1964, Chantal first became a model for fashion photographers in the teenage girls' magazine "Mademoiselle Âge Tendre". That year, Debout decided to rename her Chantal Goya because he thought that she looked like a little boy painted by the Spanish painter Francisco Goya. Daniel Filipacchi was the owner of the magazine and also the record producer of the French division of RCA Records. He suggested that Debout write and compose songs in return for a record contract for her. The first 45 EP record of Chantal Goya released at the end of 1964 and it includes the song "C'est bien Bernard" which became her first hit success.
In the fall of 1964, Chantal was invited to the TV show Rendez-vous sur le Rhin, presented by Albert Raisner, to sing her first song "C'est bien Bernard," which the influential film director Jean-Luc Godard was watching. At that time, he was writing the storyline of his movie "Masculin, féminin" and directly saw that she fit well with the role of Madeleine Zimmer in his movie. He offered the role to her, and though she was surprised by this proposition, she accepted the role alongside Jean-Pierre Léaud in the role of Paul, and Marlène Jobert in the role of Elisabeth. Although the movie was deemed unsuitable for audiences under the age of 18 upon its release on 22 March 1966, it sold 427,430 tickets at the box office in France.
She had another success in France with the song "Une écharpe, une rose" which was also a success in Japan. But, afterwards, the records that she recorded had less success in France. She also played in less movies. But her husband Jean-Jacques Debout still wrote and composed songs for the TV-Shows produced by Maritie and Gilbert Carpentier.
Also, in 1973, Chantal Goya sang the duet Les petites filles modèles with Sylvie Vartan, song written and composed by Jean-Jacques Debout in the TV-show Top à produced by Maritie and Gilbert Carpentier and devoted to Sylvie Vartan.
In 1975, Jean-Jacques Debout had his proper TV-show Numero Un produced by Maritie and Gilbert Carpentier, in which he sang songs that he has written and composed but was also the host. He had first invited the French actress Brigitte Bardot to participate at this show-TV. But, the day of the recording show, Brigitte Bardot fall ill. So, he wrote and composed as far as possible a song to finish the show. The song, called Adieu les jolis foulards is recorded by Chantal Goya with children, only for the TV-show.
This song, in which she plays the role of a French teacher who made a stage in a school of Martinique and have to come back in France, is the first song of Chantal Goya especially devoted for the children's public. The Monday following the TV-show's diffusion, the channel's direction of TF 1, channel in which the TV-show was diffused, received a lot of letters and telephone calls from persons who watched the TV-show and wanted to find the record of Adieu les jolis foulards, which was impossible, because it didn't exist yet ! Maritie Carpentier told to Chantal Goya that she must make a record of this song, which it would have for sure a big success.
So, Chantal Goya and Jean-Jacques Debout go and visit a lot of record labels in Paris to make a record of that song. But, all the record labels refused to publish the record ! After many months, Chantal Goya and Jean-Jacques Debout met François Dacla, the director of French direction of RCA Records, at a spectacle of José Féliciano. The next day, they came to French direction of RCA records in Paris, to presente the song Adieu les jolis foulards to François Dacla. Moved by the song, François Dacla decides to release and produce the disc. And, from there, Chantal Goya became a children's singer.

Partial filmography

Albums