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France mourns rock star Hallyday with exceptional pomp

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AP Paris
Last Updated : Dec 09 2017 | 9:25 PM IST
France bid farewell today to its biggest rock star, honouring Johnny Hallyday with an exceptional funeral procession down the Champs-Elysees, a presidential speech and a parade of motorcyclists, all under intense security.
Few figures in French history have earned a send-off as elaborate as the one for the man sometimes dubbed the French Elvis. It was ordered by President Emmanuel Macron a Hallyday fan himself, like generations of others across the French-speaking world.
"Johnny was yours. Johnny was his public. Johnny was his country," Macron told fans massed in central Paris for the funeral events.
Hallyday's death on Wednesday at age 74 after fighting lung cancer unleashed emotion across the country, where the man known to the public simply as Johnny had been an icon for more than half a century.
"He should have fallen 100 times but what held him up and lifted him was your fervor, the love that you brought him," Macron told Hallyday fans on the steps of Paris' Madeleine Church, referring to the musician's illnesses and extreme lifestyle.
Shouts of "Johnny! Johnny!" and thunderous applause rose up as Macron finished his speech. Fans then broke out in the singing of Hallyday tunes.

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In an honor usually reserved for heads of state or cultural greats like 19th-century writer Victor Hugo, Hallyday's funeral cortege rode past Napoleon's Arc de Triomphe monument and down the Champs-Elysees Avenue to the Place de la Concorde plaza on the Seine River.
Adding a rock touch to the pomp-filled event, hundreds of motorcyclists accompanied the procession, in a nod to Hallyday's lifelong passion for motorcycles and biker image, with his ever-present leather jackets and numerous tattoos.
About 1,500 police officers secured the area, a helicopter surveyed the scene and emergency vehicles filled nearby streets as tens of thousands of fans lined the procession route, many dressed to emulate his flashy, rebellious style.
Some climbed on fences or stoplights and even the roof of a luxury hotel to get a better view.
Catherine Frichot-Janin, 61, and her husband came from Geneva in Switzerland to join the throng.
"He's the companion who's always there when you have a worry. There will always be his music playing in a bistro or a concert," Frichot-Janin told The Associated Press.
"He's not a god, but he's always been there for me since I was a girl.

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First Published: Dec 09 2017 | 9:25 PM IST

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