Dalida 1976-1987
1976 saw another career reinvention for Dalida; releasing what is widely regarded as the first French disco single, “J’Attendrai”. Around the same, the popularity of the variety show in France was soaring, and Dalida made many television appearances during this period, not only in France but across Europe. In 1978, she recorded “Salma Ya Salama”, a traditional Egyptian folk song which due to its chart success was translated into seven languages.
The 12 single sleeve for the 1979 disco-hit Monday Tuesday... Laissez-Moi Danser.The success of “Salma Ya Salama” was followed by the first French medley single, “G?n?ration ‘78”, a disco-fused combination of her biggest hit singles to date. It also became the first French single to be accompanied by a video clip. During this disco period, Dalida would earn a gay audience, a following which is still maintained today. In November, Dalida performed a Broadway-themed show at Carnegie Hall in New York, choreographed by Lester Wilson, who created the dance routines for John Travolta in the previous year’s cinema smash Saturday Night Fever. Two years later, following the success of “Monday Tuesday... Laissez-Moi Danser” in Summer 1979, she would replicate the show at the Palais des Sports, and each show sold-out, encouraging the singer to embark on a national tour which lasted until the autumn. In the same year, the lengthy “Gigi in Paradisco”, a follow-up to the earlier “Gigi l’Amoroso”, was released.
1981 marked the release of “Rio do Brasil”, and several dates were played at The Olympia, emulating her successful 1980 tour. On the night of her first performance she became the first singer to be awarded a diamond disc, in recognition of her record sales which at that point in her career had exceeded 86 million. Dalida spent much of 1982 and 1984 on tour, releasing the album “Les P'tits Mots” in 1983 which featured hit singles in both “Lucas” and “Mourir Sur Sc?ne”. The album “Dali” was released in 1984, and was accompanied by the release of several singles, including “Soleil”, “Pour te Dire Je T’aime”, a cover of Stevie Wonder’s “I Just Called to Say I Love You”, and “Kalimba de Luna”, originally recorded by Tony Esposito. All three achieved moderate chart success, and “Dali” would become her last album of completely new recordings.
Dalida underwent two major ophthalmic operations in 1985, forcing her to put her career on hiatus. In 1986, she would play the role of a young grandmother in the Youssef Chahine film Le Sixi?me Jour, for which she received favourable critical response.
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