Career
She was an Officier of the Légion d"honneur. Born in the 12th arrondissement of Paris, Henriette Ragon began her working life as a typist, then a factory worker, a shoeseller and an antique dealer. Patachou (Their son Pierre Billon had some success as a singer in the 1970s and wrote J"ai oublié de vivre for Johnny Hallyday) She began to sing in the bistro, and journalists began to call her Patachou after the name of her cabaret (pâte-à-choux means cream puff dough).
Georges Brassens sang there, and together they sang the duet "Maman, papa".
She was the first to interpret other songs he composed such as "Le bricoleur", "Louisiana chasse aux papillons", et cetera The evening she sang them for the first time, she suggested her audience stay to the end of the show and meet the writer of these songs, and Brassens went up on to the Patachou stage for the first time and sang Le Gorille and P.de toi.
Sometimes she would collect half-ties (she would snip the neckties of customers reluctant to join in the singing) – Thomas Dewey and Errol Flynn were among her victims. First recordings Her first records were released in 1952.
She appeared at the "Bobino", a Montparnasse music-hall, toured in France and then further afield.
From 1953 onwards, she could be seen on-stage at the Palladium, the Waldorf Astoria, and Carnegie Hall, and throughout the United States. From the beginning of the 1970s she toured Japan and Sweden where "L"eternal Parigot", with her cheeky Parisian register, was popular. Death Patachou died on 30 April 2015 at the age of 96.