SINGER

Michèle Torr

1947 - Today

Photo of Michèle Torr

Icon of person Michèle Torr

Michèle Torr (born Michelle Cléberte Tort 7 April 1947) is a French singer and author, best known in non-Francophone countries for her participation in the Eurovision Song Contest for Luxembourg in 1966 and for Monaco in 1977. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Michèle Torr is the 1,233rd most popular singer (down from 1,024th in 2019), the 4,263rd most popular biography from France (down from 3,935th in 2019) and the 76th most popular French Singer.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Michèle Torr by language

Loading...

Among SINGERS

Among singers, Michèle Torr ranks 1,233 out of 4,381Before her are Nas, Rika Zaraï, Little Walter, Chayanne, Anohni, and Tina Charles. After her are Merle Haggard, Elaine Paige, Billy Ocean, David Sylvian, Jenny Berggren, and Halima Nosirova.

Most Popular Singers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1947, Michèle Torr ranks 481Before her are David Mamet, Maurizio Micheli, David Chiang, Robert Hays, Juliet Berto, and Jan T. Gross. After her are Richard Lewis, Erik Olin Wright, Candy Clark, Liu Yunshan, Lee Kerslake, and Alexis Herman.

Others Born in 1947

Go to all Rankings

In France

Among people born in France, Michèle Torr ranks 4,263 out of 6,770Before her are Luc-Olivier Merson (1846), Juliet Berto (1947), Roger Blin (1907), Fernand de Langle de Cary (1849), Honoré Charles Reille (1775), and Auguste de Montferrand (1786). After her are Pierre-Alexandre Monsigny (1729), Valérie Lemercier (1964), Ernest Goüin (1815), Clémence Poésy (1982), Eleanor of Normandy (1010), and Georges Bonnet (1889).

Among SINGERS In France

Among singers born in France, Michèle Torr ranks 76Before her are Wolfgang Windgassen (1914), Jean Philippe (1931), Daniel Balavoine (1952), Claude Nougaro (1929), Désirée Artôt (1835), and Mady Mesplé (1931). After her are Viktor Lazlo (1960), Marcel Amont (1929), Jacques Higelin (1940), Joséphine Fodor (1789), Danièle Dupré (1938), and Emma Shapplin (1974).