Paris to name street after David Bowie
PARIS, France — The city of Paris will name a street after rock music icon David Bowie, officials said, a first in honor of the singer eight years after his death.
"Rue David Bowie" will be officially inaugurated in the capital's 13th district on the left bank of the city.
No former dignitary's name will need to be removed to make room for Bowie, as the street was created recently as part of a major makeover of the neighborhood which also includes modernist university library Bibliotheque Francois Mitterrand.
The thoroughfare — around 50 meters long — was previously known to city planners as "VoieDZ/13," a working title that could have appealed to Bowie himself who wrote songs such as "TVC15" or "5:15."
Bowie, who died on January 10, 2016, of liver cancer would have been 77 on January 8.
Bowie counts as one of the most influential, as well as best-selling, musicians of the 20th century, mostly thanks to his unparalleled ability to reinvent himself artistically throughout his career that took off with hit single "Space Oddity" in 1969.
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His landmark songs and albums include "Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars" and "Aladdin Sane," and commercial smash hits "Let's Dance" and "China Girl" as well as gloomily experimental works such as "Low."
'Dancing in the Street!'
Paris played less of a prominent role in Bowie's life than London, Berlin, and Los Angeles, but French avant-garde theatrical culture was an influence on his visual style.
He also successfully covered French-language songs "Amsterdam" and "Ma Mort" (My Death) by Jacques Brel, who was not actually French but Belgian. A cryptic line in Bowie's "Aladdin Sane" song refers to "Paris or maybe hell."
He still has a cult following in France, where fan clubs such as "Bowie France" sell merchandise, organize concerts and Bowie conventions drawing thousands, and where cover band "Bowie Reloaded" fills even large venues with nostalgic fans.
An avowed Bowie fan, the mayor of Paris's 13th district Jerom Coumet launched the idea for a Bowie street in early 2020, and won Paris city approval later that year, arguing that the star had "a strong link with the city of light." There is no record of a David-Bowie-named street anywhere else.
In a post on X (formerly Twitter), Coumet announced that "the 13th welcomes David Bowie! Dancing in the Street!," a reference to a hit song performed by Bowie and Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger.
The unveiling of the street name plaque will be followed by an evening of homage to Bowie at the district's city hall, featuring Bowie friend and biographer Jerome Soligny as well as Clifford Slapper, producer of a tribute album "Bowie Songs One."
A Bowie exhibition, also at the mayor's office, is to run to the end of next week.