Emil Dimitrov

He was born the son of the Bulgarian illusionist and his French assistant. He went to study at the National Academy for Theatre and Film Arts in Sofia.
His career began in 1962, with the premier of his song ''Arlekino''; it won third place at the Sopot International Song Festival that year, and turned him into a star overnight.
In 1970 he was signed to the French record company EMI Pathé-Marconi, which released his first French-language single ''"L'amour c'est toi"''. His song ''Monica'' (known in Bulgarian as ''"Моя страна, моя България" ('My country, my Bulgaria')'' sold out with a circulation of over 500,000 copies in Germany and 100,000 copies in Belgium, although, it was initially banned by Bulgarian communist censors for "bourgeois influence". In the modern day, it is considered to be an unofficial national hymn in Bulgaria.
He was married twice, and his son Emil was born from his second marriage in 1970.
According to the American magazine ''Billboard'' Emil Dimitrov sold over 40 million copies of his albums in Eastern Europe and the USSR.
He died on 30 March 2005, at 64 years of age. Provided by Wikipedia
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