Line Marsa
Annetta Giovanna Gassion, known by stage name Line Marsa, was a French cabaret singer and circus performer, as an equestrian and tightrope artist. She is best known as the mother of internationally renowned singer Édith Piaf, considered France's national chanteuse.
Early life
Born Annetta Giovanna Maillard on 4 August 1895 in Livorno, Tuscany, to French parents who were on tour as part of a travelling circus troupe. Her father, Auguste Eugène Maillard, came from the Loire region of France. Her mother, Emma, was the daughter of Saïd ben Mohamed, of Kabyle origin, born in Mogador, Morocco, and Margherita Bracco, who was born in Murazzano, Piedmont.Career
Marsa was a singer, circus performer and equestrian. Her stage name, Line Marsa, was inspired by La Marsa, a port in Tunisia, according to her son Herbert. Although said to have a voice similar to that of Piaf, she had no success as a singer.Personal life
On 4 September 1914, she married Louis Alphonse Gassion, a singer and circus contortionist. The following year, on December 19, she gave birth to their first child, Édith Giovanna, who would become Édith Piaf. On 31 August 1918, she gave birth to their second child, Herbert. Édith was raised by Annetta's mother, Emma, from 1915 to 1918, when she was sent to Louis Gassion's mother instead due to Annetta and Emma's neglect.Annetta and Louis were divorced on 4 June 1929 reportedly because of her substance abuse. She never remarried.
Death
Line Marsa died of a drug overdose in Paris on 6 February 1945. She is not buried with her daughter Piaf at Père Lachaise Cemetery, unlike Louis-Alphonse Gassion but in the Parisian cemetery of Thiais.In popular culture
Marsa was portrayed by Clotilde Courau in Olivier Dahan's 2007 Piaf biopic, La vie en rose.In 2021 the Comitato Unesco Jazz day Livorno declared 4 August "Giornata degli artisti di strada" to remember Line Marsa. The Livornese graffiti artist Mart made a painting on the wall of the public park Villa Fabbricotti and a stone plate: "Line Marsa / / nacque a Livorno / 4 agosto 1895".