Nouhad Haddad (Fayrouz) - 1946
Nouhad singing in a school performance - 1947
which was typically Eastern and at the same time flexible enough to rendera Western mode admirably. She was appointed as a chorus singer at the radio station in Beirut.
Her father objected to her going to the radio station at first. It took a lot of coaxing and some heavyhanded interference by close acquaintances to convince him. He stipulated that Fayrouz was to be accompanied by her mother, her brother Joseph, or the neighbor's boy when she went to the station.
Nouhad in the forefront singing at the Lebanese Radio Station - 1950
Nouhad Haddad singing at the Lebanese Radio Station - 1949
With conductor Tawfiq al-Basha singing solo at the Near East Radio Station - 1950
(From left to right) Fayrouz, 'Assi Rahbani, Halim al-Rumi and Mansour Rahbani - 1951
The young singer was known to her listeners as Yola or as Fatat al-Jabal (Mountain Girl). Al-Rumi suggested that she take the "stage name" Fayrouz (which means "turquoise") because her voice reminded him of a precious stone. At first she thought he was joking, but later on she took his advice.
(From left to right) Fayrouz, 'Assi Rahbani and Mansour Rahbani in his policeman's attire - 1951
Fayrouz - 1951
Fayrouz and Assi Rahbani on their wedding day surrounded by members of their families; Fayrouz's younger sisters Hoda and Amal appear before the bride and bridegroom - 1954
(From left to right) Najib Hankash, Assi Rahbani, Farid al-Atrash,Fayrouz, Muhammad Abd al-Wahab, Badi'a Masabni, Filimon Wahbeh, andMansour Rahbani - 1955
In the summer of 1957, she faced an audience in the open for the first time, standing at the base of one of the six columns that comprise the temple of Jupiter in Baalbeck. It was the largest audience that had ever gathered at the Roman temple. Under a crescent moon, Fayrouz, flooded with blue light, began to sing, in a calm, confident voice, Lubnan Ya Akhdar Hilo (O Green, Sweet Lebanon). People were spellbound; it was a magical moment. From that day on, Fayrouz would sing and act, at least once a year, in major musicals such as al-Baalbakiyya (The Baalbeck Woman), a fantasy in which gods ordain Voice to come to life among humans; Jisr al-Qamar (Bridge of the Moon), where a charitable fairy makes peace between parties hostile to each other; and Ayyam Fakhreddin (The Days of Fakhreddin), the story of a seventeenth-century prince who struggles to rebuild his country, having faithfully fought for its liberation. Fayrouz was on her way.
Fayrouz at the LebaneseTelevision Station - 1956
Fayrouz, who sang atLondon's Albert Hall in1962, returns to London'sPalladium in 1978.
Fayrouz at Carnegie Hall in New York City - 1971
Yet to Fayrouz, all the official acclaim and recognition that she has received over the years does not parallel the joy she experiences as she sings when she spots the absorbed attention of a single anonymous listener in a crowd. To her, singing is not merely a perfected profession, but a way of life. The Fayrouz of today, like the Fayrouz of yester-year, continues to attend mass in the village church at Antilias. There, every year, during Holy Week she sings to the devout villagers with a dedication that perhaps is equalled only by their sirnple piety. It is this dedication which consistently refines her talent and continues to set Fayrouz apart in a category all her own amid the chaotic trends of Middle Eastern music.
Joseph W. Haddad
Fayrouz 's brother Joseph Haddad and sister Hoda
Nouhad Hadded (left) withtwo friends, at grandmother'sgarden in the village ofDbayeh al-Chouf - 1942.
Nouhad Haddad (Fayrouz) to theright with a friend at thestaircase of the neighbors - 1944
Fayrouz has become a very famous singer who is adored by millions of people, but to me she is still Nouhad, my sister.
Nouhad with her motherLiza al-Boustani crossingMarty's Square in Beirut - 1945
'Assi Rahbani
Mansour Rahbani
When they graduated, the Rahbanis became joint directors of a radio program. They originated a series of song-skits, a sort of musical theatre which became highly successful and secured their reputation. Their collaboration with Fayrouz be gan when she was hired as one of the performers on their show. Since that time the Rahbanis have become Lebanon's most influential composers. According to Claude Rostand, they are the originators of Arab light opera, and their work in this area has become prolific. The Rahbanis have also played a leading role in the current adaptation of ancient Arabic music to modern instruments and orchestration.