SINGER

Viktor Lazlo

1960 - Today

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Icon of person Viktor Lazlo

Sonia Dronnier (born 7 October 1960), known by her stage name Viktor Lazlo, is a French writer, singer, and comedian. Born in France, she studied in Belgium, where she is primarily known. Her biggest hit was "Breathless" in 1987. That year she also hosted the Eurovision Song Contest 1987 held in Brussels as well as several TV shows and literary events. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Viktor Lazlo is the 1,322nd most popular singer (down from 1,127th in 2019), the 4,416th most popular biography from France (down from 4,091st in 2019) and the 77th most popular French Singer.

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Among SINGERS

Among singers, Viktor Lazlo ranks 1,322 out of 4,381Before her are Hoagy Carmichael, Chris Farlowe, Edda Moser, Hansi Hinterseer, Roy Eldridge, and Anna Oxa. After her are BoA, André Hazes, Juan Pons, Beverly Sills, George London, and Aneka.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1960, Viktor Lazlo ranks 266Before her are Slavko Štimac, Apa Sherpa, Meg Tilly, José Eduardo Agualusa, David L. Rabinowitz, and Željko Šturanović. After her are Simon Gallup, Dominique Wilkins, Gilbert Diendéré, Glenn Strömberg, Shinji Tanaka, and Dominic Miller.

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In France

Among people born in France, Viktor Lazlo ranks 4,416 out of 6,770Before her are Michel Maffesoli (1944), André Gaboriaud (1895), Gilles Perrault (1931), Dudo of Saint-Quentin (960), Adelaide of Normandy (1026), and Jakob Abbadie (1654). After her are Valentin Conrart (1603), Roger de Rabutin, Comte de Bussy (1618), Colette Marchand (1925), Pierre-François Bouchard (1771), Camille Mandrillon (1891), and Alphonso, Earl of Chester (1273).

Among SINGERS In France

Among singers born in France, Viktor Lazlo ranks 77Before her are Jean Philippe (1931), Daniel Balavoine (1952), Claude Nougaro (1929), Désirée Artôt (1835), Mady Mesplé (1931), and Michèle Torr (1947). After her are Marcel Amont (1929), Jacques Higelin (1940), Joséphine Fodor (1789), Danièle Dupré (1938), Emma Shapplin (1974), and Philippe Jaroussky (1978).