Andrée Lescot
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Andrée Lescot was a singer, showgirl, soprano and daughter of Haitian president Élie Lescot.[1] Lescot was educated in Canada, where she studied for eight years at the École de musique Vincent-d'Indy.[2] She was featured on local radio before moving to Paris where she attended the Versailles conservatory.[2] Afterwards she landed a role in a musical by Albert Willemetz. She published several records of Haitian and Louisiana folk songs, accompanied by French music professor Roger Bourdin[3] and his orchestra. Depicted in a costume holding bow and arrow, she received attention in the African-American press in 1954 for starring in a revue in Lausanne, Switzerland.[1] In 1952, she appeared on a Canadian TV program entitled "Chansons Créoles avec Andrée Lescot" where she sang three Haitian Folkloric songs.[4] In 1955 the album Chansons Créoles Chansons Folkloriques D'Haïti was released on the London International label.[5] In the same year she married French actor Roger Murciano.[2]