Suzanne Lapointe
Suzanne Lapointe, C.M. (16 May 1934 – 2 January 2015) was a Canadian singer, actress and television presenter. BiographySuzanne Lapointe was born in Montreal on 16 May 1934, the second of six children[1] of Armand Lapointe,[2] a commercial traveler, and Lucette Brousseau,[2] who created clothing. With a voice worthy of a prima donna, she went initially towards her study of singing as a young girl after her classical studies. Initiated by her singing aunt Marthe, who was a soprano for Variétés lyriques,[1] she studied classical singing at the Conservatoire de musique du Québec à Montréal where she also studied acting with Jean Valcourt and drama in Sita Riddez's class.[1] In 1959, she successfully auditioned to become a hostess on the television show La Poule aux oeufs d'or,[1] which became a gateway to the artistic field in Quebec. In 1960, she received a grant from the Canada Council for the Arts, which allowed her to spend two years singing in New York City.[1] From time to time, she sang in television programs including L'heure du concert and Music-Hall.[1] An outstanding cook, Lapointe animated Attention c'est chaud on Télévision de Radio-Canada, a show on cooking with young chef Daniel Vézina, and published more than twelve books of recipes[1] from 1970 to 1984, including La cuisine de maman Lapointe and Plaisir de recevoir. However, her career reached a peak in 1987 when she co-animated Les Démons du midi with comedian Gilles Latulippe. Their madness and laughter invaded homes around Quebec every day of the week for six years with a total of 1,050 shows, Suzanne's unique and communicative laughter being a distinctive sign. Having survived breast cancer in the mid-1990s shortly after her husband's death, she became very involved in the cause to find a cure. In 2009, the Order of Canada introduced:
Without children and a widow of Pierre Larin[2] for about twenty years, but surrounded by her four surviving sisters (Louise, Andrée, Claire and Isabelle)[2] and their children, she was suffering from Alzheimer's disease for a few years before she died from lymphoma[4] on 2 January 2015[1] at a retirement home[2] in Sainte-Adèle where she lived for four months.[5][6] Honours
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