facile$27168$ - translation to italian
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facile$27168$ - translation to italian

FRENCH MUSICIAN AND ACTOR
Johnny Halliday; Jean-Philippe Smet; En V.O.; Pas Facile; Jean-Philippe Léo Smet
  • Hallyday in 1965
  • Johnny Hallyday, 1963
  • The parish cemetery of [[Lorient, Saint Barthélemy]], where Johnny Hallyday's grave is located

facile      
adj. semplicistico, accomodante, compiacente

Definition

Facile
·adj Easy to be surmounted or removed; easily conquerable; readily mastered.
II. Facile ·adj Ready; quick; expert; as, he is facile in expedients; he wields a facile pen.
III. Facile ·adj Easily persuaded to good or bad; yielding; ductile to a fault; pliant; flexible.
IV. Facile ·adj Easy to be done or performed: not difficult; performable or attainable with little labor.
V. Facile ·adj Easy of access or converse; mild; courteous; not haughty, austere, or distant; affable; complaisant.

Wikipedia

Johnny Hallyday

Jean-Philippe Léo Smet (French: [ʒɑ̃ filip leo smɛt]; 15 June 1943 – 5 December 2017), better known by his stage name Johnny Hallyday, was a French rock and roll and pop singer and actor, credited for having brought rock and roll to France.

During a career spanning 57 years, he released 79 albums and sold more than 110 million records worldwide, mainly in the French-speaking world, making him one of the best-selling artists in the world. He had five diamond albums, 40 golden albums, 22 platinum albums and earned ten Victoires de la Musique. He sang an estimated 1,154 songs and performed 540 duets with 187 artists. Credited for his strong voice and his spectacular shows, he sometimes arrived by entering a stadium through the crowd and once by jumping from a helicopter above the Stade de France, where he performed 9 times. Among his 3,257 shows completed in 187 tours, the most memorable were at Parc des Princes in 1993, at the Stade de France in 1998, just after France's win in the 1998 FIFA World Cup, as well as at the Eiffel Tower in 2000, which had record-breaking ticket sales for a French artist. A million spectators gathered to see his performance at the Eiffel Tower, with some 10 million watching on television.

Usually working with the best French artists and musicians of his time, he collaborated with Charles Aznavour, Michel Berger and Jean-Jacques Goldman. Hugely popular in France, he was referred to as simply "Johnny" and seen as a "national monument" and a part of the French cultural legacy. He was a symbol of the Trente Glorieuses when he emerged in 1960 and a familiar figure to four generations. More than 2,500 magazine covers and 190 books were dedicated to him during his lifetime, making him one of the people most widely covered by the media in France. His death from cancer in 2017 was followed by a "popular tribute" during which a million people attended the procession and 15 million others watched the ceremony on TV. He remained relatively unknown in the English-speaking world, where he was dubbed "the biggest rock star you've never heard of" and introduced as the French version of Elvis Presley.