Next spring, Christophe Maé will make his comeback with the release of a brand new album. In the meantime, the singer is taking the opportunity to watch his two sons, Jules and Marcel, grow up.
Last October, Christophe Maé celebrated his fiftieth candle. The opportunity for the artist to reissue one of his flagship songs: 40 years tomorrow having thus become 50 years already. But, at the dawn of the release of his new album, scheduled for next March, the interpreter of Beautiful Lady however remains discreet.
Christophe Maé challenged by his eldest son: “I still struggled a lot“
It must be said that the man who grew up in Carpentras preferred the gentleness of the South to Parisian show business to establish his life. Living with his wife, the dancer Nadège Sarron, and their children, Jules (born in 2008) and Marcel (born in 2013), not far from Aix-en-Provence, he spends happy days in an old sheepfold renovated in his image. “When I am away from home, I tell myself that there is no other place where I could see myself living”had also entrusted the one who, in the city, is actually called Christophe Martichon, to France Bleu.
Guest by Top Musicthe former member of the troupe Sun King agreed to make some intimate confidences. Starting with his fatherhood, he who shares some common passions with his sons, starting with skiing. “I have two little guys, they both ski and the big one is starting to do well!”he said. Before telling: “He told me: ‘You can’t pass the arrow (a timed alpine skiing event, editor’s note) with me’. So I signed up and then I got silver arrow. I still struggled quite a bit.”
Christophe Maé more flexible than his wife? “It’s the mother at home who…”
“At home, with my two sons, I listen to a lot of hip-hop. There are things that speak to me, others less, but what’s super interesting is that the guys work”then clarified Christophe Maé, happy to open up to new worlds thanks to his two children. Who are also football fans! “The small one is for PSG, and the biggest one is for Marseille”he told France Bleu.
A true father hen, Christophe Maé nevertheless recognizes that it is his wife who runs the daily life of the little family: “It’s the mother at home who keeps order, ‘We eat at such and such a time, we go to bed at such and such a time’, I tell her ‘come on, leave them alone, we’ll watch a film this evening, it’s good.’


