Lucienne Delyle (16 April 1917 – 10 April 1962) was a French singer.
After the very famous song Mon amant de Saint-Jean (my lover from Saint-Jean), in 1942, Lucienne Delyle became the most popular French female singer of the 1950s.
Born in Paris, she was a fully educated pharmacist. First she sang as an amateur singer, until 1939, when she was heard and immediately engaged by Jacques Canetti, the artistic director of Radio Cité. In 1940, she married the jazzman Aimé Barelli (1917–1995), who guided her career ever since. With him she had a daughter, Minouche Barelli (1947–2004). After the immense success of the song "Mon amant de Saint-Jean" (My Lover From Saint-Jean), in 1942, Lucienne Delyle became the most popular French female singer in France. She was most popular during the 1950s. In 1953, Bruno Coquatrix invited her and young Gilbert Bécaud to be the stars for the gala opening concert at the Olympia. Delyle's career declined rapidly in the end of the 1950s, due to the progress of the leukemia she suffered from. In 1960 she gave the last series of concerts on the stage of Bobino. She died in Monte Carlo, in 1962.
Pr?s de la fontaine
La fontaine des amours
Si ton c?ur est en peine
Tu vas te pencher un jour
Dans l'onde qui jase
Tu jettes deux sous d'argent
En disant cette phrase
La m?me depuis mille ans :
Je l'aime et qu'elle m'aime aussi
Je l'aime et qu'elle m'aime aussi
Et dans l'eau qui chante
Tu vois danser un beau jour
Une image charmante
C'est toi mais au bras de l'amour
Ah qu'elle soit tout ? moi
Rien qu'? moi
Je l'aime et c'est pour la vie
Je l'aime et c'est pour la vie
Heureux ceux qui viennent
Pencher leur visage un jour
Au bord de la fontaine
De la fontaine des amours