Sylvie Vartan, like her late husband Johnny Hallyday, has shared her life for decades between France and the United States. On the other side of the Atlantic, she has a superb villa with a swimming pool.
At 81 years old, Sylvie Vartan said goodbye to the stage during a singing tour entitled I bow out. And the star plans to fully enjoy his retirement in his Los Angeles home. The singer of the hits Love is like a cigarette, The most beautiful to go dancing or even Like a boy chose to settle down there years ago for a specific reason…
Where does Sylvie Vartan live in Los Angeles?
Sylvie Vartan lives in a villa with a swimming pool located at 706 Beverly Drive, in Los Angeles, revealed the JDD a few years ago during a report on the star. A chic address – a metro station is also under construction – located in the heart of Beverly Hills, not far from the Los Angeles Country Club. “All the big shows that I put on for 30 years, I rehearsed them there, with choreographers and dancers based there. I’ve been living in Los Angeles for a long time, I rented a lot of houses before getting married to Tony Scotti“, she said in The Dispatch.
Like her late husband Johnny, the singer always loved her life in sunny California. “The United States has always been beneficial to me. They allow me to gain height. Here, I am no longer in the dizziness of a life which I like, of course, since I chose it, but which is a little too volcanic. I need the calm of this place to think“, she also said in Gala.
But Sylvie Vartan has not cut ties with France since she also owns a house in Villa Montmorency, a secure neighborhood in the 16th arrondissement of Paris; his son David Hallyday owns half of the house because Johnny gave it to him after his divorce from Sylvie.
Why does Sylvie Vartan live in Los Angeles?
In 1977, David Hallyday was 11 years old and Sylvie Vartan decided to leave France.in emergency“Johnny Hallyday cheated on her and a magazine is about to reveal everything.”I have to flee France to protect my son, our privacy and our peace“, explains the artist in his book Mompublished in 2016.
This version is later confirmed by David in the pages of the magazine Paris Match. “My mother wanted to spare me the excitement around her, the price of her notoriety. She wanted me to grow up normally. Go to school, have friends… So that summer we moved to Los Angeles.”








