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Betty Mars

Betty Mars (born Yvette Baheux, 30 July 1944 in Paris – 20 February 1989 in Paris) was a French singer and actress, best known for her participation in the 1972 Eurovision Song Contest. Mars was the youngest of ten children and from an early age showed a flair for dance and acrobatics. By age 16 she was appearing in revues and spent the 1960s travelling as a lead performer in shows around Europe and the Americas. In 1971 she was spotted singing in cabaret by composer Frédéric Botton, who offered her the song "Monsieur l'étranger" which became her first recording. In 1972, Mars was chosen to sing the Botton-penned "Comé-comédie" as the French representative in the 17th Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 25 March in Edinburgh. "Comé-comédie" is an unmistakably French chanson-style song, which finished in 11th place of 18 entries. Reportedly beset by emotional and financial problems, Mars jumped from a window of her flat in La Défense on 31 January 1989. She died three weeks later, on 20 February in the Foch Hospital at Suresnes. Source: Article "Betty Mars" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.

Known For: Acting
Born: Paris, France, 1944-07-30
Died: 1989-02-20

Film

No.YearTitleRoleVote Average
11973Marguerite Moreno0
21974Vocals for Ariel (voice) (uncredited)80
31974Esmeralda - un chanteuse de genre sans talent46
41975Emilienne36

Television

No.YearTitleRoleVote Average
11971Self60
21971Self0
31972Self60
41975Self0
51984Self40
61984Self (archive footage)40
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API from TMDB