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07 June 2012

Angèle Durand

Belgian actress and singer Angèle Durand (1925-2001) was a popular star in Germany during the 1950s and 1960s. She appeared in several musicals. In both 1956 and 1960, she was a contestant of the German pre-selection for the Eurovision Song Contest.

Angèle Durand
German card by Electrola, DrW 2587 d. Photo: Wohlfarth, Hamburg.

Angèle Durand in Der lachende Vagabund (1958)
German postcard by Vereinigte Verlagsgesellschafte Franke & Co., München. Photo: Zeyn / Union / Grimm. Angèle Durand in Der lachende Vagabund/The laughing vagabond (Thomas Engel, 1958).

Borrowed dress


Angèle Durand was born as Angèle Caroline Liliane Josette Marie-José De Geest in 1925, in Antwerp, Belgium. She was the daughter of a diamond merchant and a ballet dancer. Her grandmother was a well-known Wagner interpreter.

At 15, Angèle made her stage debut as a singer. In a dress borrowed from her aunt, she won second place in a talent competition at the Rubens Paleis (Rubens Palace Theatre) in Antwerp. Her voice was dark and typical. She got engagements for the radio, first in Brussels, and later for the American station AFN in Stuttgart, Germany.

In 1950 she replaced a singer of the legendary Duke Ellington Band during a concert in Brussels. Soon after this successful performance, she made an extended European tour with Ellington. She got more engagements for variety and radio shows in Germany, and in 1950 she had her first hit in both Belgium and Germany with 'C'est si bon'.

The following year she also made her first film appearance in Die Mitternachtsvenus/Midnight Venus (Ferdinand Dörfler, 1951) starring Theo Lingen. In 1951 she met her later husband Nils Nobach, who would become her producer. She appeared in the German success comedy Käpt'n Bay-Bay (Helmut Käutner, 1953) as the partner of Hans Albers.

Her song So ist Paris (1956) became another international hit. In 1957 she was together with Maurice Chevalier one of the stars of Tivoli in Copenhagen. She also performed in variety shows with stars like Zarah Leander, Edith Piaf and Josephine Baker.

Angele Durand
East-German postcard by VEB Volkskunstverlag Reichenbach i.v., Berlin, no. G 612, 1956. Retail price: 0,15 DM. Photo: Krüger, Berlin.

Angele Durand
German postcard.

Eurovision Song Contest


In the 1950s and early 1960s Angèle Durand appeared in several German musicals and Schlager films, like Ein Mädchen aus Paris/A Girl From Paris (Frans Seitz, 1954), Die Herrin vom Sölderhof/The Mistress of Sölderhof (Jürgen von Alten, 1955) with Ilse Werner, Der Lachende Vagabund/The Laughing Vagabond (Thomas Engel, 1958) and Hula-Hopp, Conny (Heinz Paul, 1959) with Conny Froboess.

In both 1956 and 1960, she was a contestant in the German preselection for the Eurovision Song Contest. In 1960, together with Rex Gildo, she sang the duet 'Abitur der Liebe'.

From 1958 to 1961 she was married to producer Nils Nobach. After their divorce she had a new big hit with 'Ja ich bin die tolle Frau'. During a tour, she met the Dutch entertainer Lou van Burg, who became her new life partner. She became also his manager.

In the 1970s after their separation, she started a new career as a theatre actress. She appeared in Germany and France in musicals such as 'Anatevka', 'Die Dreigroschenoper' (Three Penny Opera) and 'Hello Dolly', and also made a solo program, 'Das Theater und ich' (The Theatre and Me). In 1976 she appeared in the documentary Ich bin ein Antistar - Das skandalöse Leben der Evelyn Künneke/I'm an Antistar (Rosa von Praunheim, 1976), about the life and career of the German singer Evelyn Künneke. In 1977 Durand’s song 'Chanson d'amour' (1958) would become a huge hit in a new version sung by the group Manhattan Transfer.

She often was seen on radio and TV, like in an episode of the popular Krimi series Tatort (1982). Angèle Durand died in 2001 in Augsburg, Germany. She was 76.

Angèle Durand
German promotion card for Electrola, DrW 3043 a. Photo: Grimm, Berlin.

Angele Durand
German postcard by Rüdel-Verlag. Photo: Wiener Stadthalle / Bavariafilm. Publicity still for Sing, aber spiel nicht mit mir/Sing, but Don't Play with Me (Kurt Nachmann, 1963).

Sources: Stephanie D’heil (Steffi-line), Wikipedia (German) and IMDb.

This post was last updated on 2 February 2024.

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