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Rene Angelil, Celine Dion's Husband And Ex-manager, Dies At The Age Of 73

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Jan, 2016 01:14 PM
    Rene Angelil, the entertainment maestro who guided Celine Dion to superstardom and then married her, has died, according to Francine Chaloult, a spokeswoman for Dion.
     
    He was 73.
     
    Chaloult said Angelil died Thursday morning at his home in Las Vegas. Coroner John Fudenberg said in a statement that Angelil died of throat cancer and no further investigation into his death was expected.
     
    Angelil had been battling a recurrence of throat cancer since initially undergoing surgery for the condition in April 1999. He had to undergo another operation in December 2013.
     
    While Dion and Angelil's entourage insisted he was doing well, Angelil stepped back from the day-to-day management of his megastar wife's career in June 2014. He turned it over to longtime friend Aldo Giampaolo, a noted impresario himself in Quebec, but remained involved in key decisions.
     
    A month after that announcement, Dion said Angelil was focusing on his sons and "working really hard on his health."
     
    "He's being a dad at the house, which I'm really happy about," she told a news conference in Montreal.
     
    By August, Dion also decided to put her career on hold, citing a "very difficult and stressful time for the couple" and inflammation in her throat muscles.
     
    "I want to devote every ounce of my strength and energy to my husband's healing, and to do so, it's important for me to dedicate this time to him and to our children," she said.
     
    In March 2015, Dion announced she would return to the stage with a residency at the Colosseum in Las Vegas. She said at the time that Angelil had a feeding tube and that she was helping him to eat three times a day. Despite his illness, it was Angelil who encouraged her to return to the stage.
     
    "He wants me back, he wants me strong, he wants to see me again because I'm his favourite singer," Dion said at the Billboard Music Awards in May 2015. "So he wants me out there, and I have to say that I'm ready. It's hard, but we're ready."
     
    Dion returned to Vegas in August 2015 and said doctors weren't able to say how long Angelil had, but that he'd already planned his funeral and told his wife he wanted to die in her arms.
     
    "Rene says to me, 'I want to die in your arms.' (I say) 'OK, fine, I'll be there, you'll die in my arms,'" Dion told USA Today in an interview. 
     
    The couple, who were 26 years apart in age, married in an elaborate ceremony in 1994 at Notre Dame Basilica in Montreal that drew throngs. Former prime minister Brian Mulroney was among the guests at the ceremony where Dion wore a glittering crystal headpiece. The nuptials were compared to the royal wedding of Prince Charles and Diana.
     
    Angelil and Dion have always been one of entertainment's power couples, owning lavish homes in the United States and Canada, but the shrewd entertainment czar sprang from more humble roots.
     
    Angelil was born in Montreal on Jan. 16, 1942, to a Syrian father and a Quebecois mother.
     
    He grew up in the city's north-end Villeray district. He showed signs of his future career as he put on little shows for his neighbours. One of his friends in school was Pierre Labelle, who would later go on to join Angelil as one of the popular singing Les Baronets.
     
    A gifted student, Angelil advanced quickly through school. It was while studying at Ecole Saint-Viateur that he met Jean Beaulne, who floated the idea of creating a singing group. In 1961, as Angelil, Beaulne and Labelle were approaching their 20s, they quit school to go into full-time performing.
     
    The group enjoyed modest success in clubs before they hired Ben Kaye as their manager. That move and their translation of the Beatles' "Hold Me Tight" caused Les Baronets to take off. Over the next several years, the group toured across Quebec but also at venues in the United States. But with the departure of Beaulne in 1968, Les Baronets started to lose traction and broke up in 1972. Angelil then teamed with friend Guy Cloutier to manage several up-and-coming Quebec artists including Rene Simard and Ginette Reno.
     
     
    He later struck out on his own and in 1981 received an audio tape in the mail from Dion's mother, who encouraged him to "listen to it carefully. It's my 12-year-old daughter."
     
    Struck by the voice of the young woman, Angelil quickly took her under his wing. He reportedly mortgaged his home to finance her first album.
     
    Success came quickly and Angelil won Quebec's Felix Award as manager of the year in 1987 and 1988. He gave Dion an image makeover when she turned 18 and launched her first English-language album — "Unison" — in 1990, which established her as an international pop star.
     
    World tours and megastardom followed under his guidance. Dion's most recent album, 2013's "Loved Me Back to Life," topped the charts in Canada before reaching platinum certification four times over. The lush Colosseum at Caesars Palace was built specifically for Dion, where she played to sold out shows for years.
     
    The raspy-voiced Angelil was also an avid poker player, having learned the game from his parents. He once qualified at the 2005 World Series of Poker Tournament of Champions. He also finished in the money at the 2007 Mirage Poker Showdown event on the World Poker Tour.
     
    Dion and Angelil had three children — Rene-Charles, who was born in 2001, and twins Nelson and Eddy, who arrived in 2010. Angelil also had three children from his previous two marriages.
     
    RENE ANGELIL REMEMBERED AS 'GREAT QUEBECER,' 'THE KING'
     
    MONTREAL — The late Rene Angelil is being remembered as a "great Quebecer" who "influenced the world."
     
    In Angelil's hometown of Montreal, Mayor Denis Coderre said flags at city hall would fly at half-mast to honour the man who "influenced the world with Quebecois music and the culture of our nation."
     
    Parti Quebecois Leader Pierre Karl Peladeau called Angelil "a world monument of show business. He was a great Quebecer who never forgot his roots."
     
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tweeted: "My condolences to Celine Dion, and to the children, friends and loved ones of Rene Angelil on his passing."
     
     
    Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard called Angelil “engaged, passionate, talented and courageous.
     
    “Those are the words that come to me to describe his professional career. Throughout the years, we learned to know him, to appreciate him and especially, to love him,” Couillard said in a statement. 
     
    A longtime friend and collaborator of Angelil says he felt a strong bond with Celine Dion's husband from the moment they met.
     
    Vito Luprano signed Dion to what was then known as CBS Records in 1986. He recalled forming an instant connection with Angelil as they worked towards a common goal: catapulting the Quebec chanteuse to international stardom.
     
    "Rene came in to see me in the office in 1986, and the first day I met him I thought like we were old souls, as if we knew each other for so long," Luprano said in a phone interview from Montreal on Thursday.
     
    Luprano first teamed with Angelil and Dion on the 1987 French-language album "Incognito." He was responsible for organizing and overseeing the production team that worked on more than 20 albums with Dion. 
     
    "The first (hand)shake I had with him I thought we decided we were going to be partners in the venture of taking Celine to the top.... Then of course, there's so much that happened. We made so many albums together so there's a long list of memories."
     
     
    Quebec talk show host Guy A. Lepage, another close friend of Angelil's, also took to Twitter as news of his friend's death spread.
     
    "My poker partner has died. He was kind and cheerful. And attentive. And loving. And generous. And I am sad," he wrote.
     
    Rodger Brulotte, another long-time friend and a former Montreal Expos baseball broadcaster, said: "He always took care of us, always made sure we were having a good time. I don't remember once in 50 years that I even had an argument with Rene Angelil. He was a great Quebecer."
     
    Quebec singer Ginette Reno wrote on her Facebook page: "It was an honour to work with such a great person whose art achieved what I call 'the sacred fire.' Long live the king, long live Rene."
     
    Famed Quebec filmmaker Xavier Dolan also sent his condolences to the Dion family, writing on Twitter, “Rene Anglelil touched the stars, now he joins them.”
     
    Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas issued a statement Thursday night saying Dion's performances planned for Saturday and Sunday were cancelled.

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