Hanan: “Don’t Miss Her Wherever She Will Be!!!”
Hanan/ Hanaan
(Jeanette Hayek Harouni)
Hanan/Hanaan, Caravan 12 January 1956. Courtesy of Newspapers.com |
Hanaan or Hanan was born Jeanette Nehme Hayek on 8 November 1929 in Beirut, Lebanon. She was one of five children born
to Jacob Hayek and Wadiha Atik Hayek. Ironically, the same year Jeanette’s birth the first Lebanese
film, The Adventures of Mabrouk, was released. Jeanette displayed the
talents of an actor and singer early on and received classical Arabic music training. Jeanette first traveled to Brazil in 1947 and again in 1948 to perform in concert with Wadih Saffi. Jeanette's mother accompanied her on the trip.
Upon her return to Beirut, she married Michel Harouni in 1948. She and Michel travelled to and from Brazil and Argentina in the 1950s as haflas took her a tours of cities throughout the Lebanese and Syrian diaspora. In the the period from 1890 to 1930, some 370,000 Arab immigrants settled in Argentina and some 130,000 immigrated to Brazil. Interest in Jeanette’s
singing and acting abilities grew and in 1950 she appeared in the movie “The
Bride of Lebanon” starring Mahmud Fawezi Ellas, Mohamed Salman, and Hagar
Hamadi. At the time, the entire country
of Lebanon boasted some 60 total movie theaters and approximately, 23 of these
operated in Beirut. Theaters imported most feature films shown in Lebanon in
1950 from the United States and Egypt. Some 221 of 330 features films came from
the United States, the next closest film import competitor was Egypt with 37,
Great Britain with 31, France 12, and the remainder came from Italy, Mexico,
Sweden, and Denmark.
Jeanette's gift for song and acting gained immediate recognition in Lebanon, Syria, and Palestine/Israel. Jeanette began to tour places in the Middle East, North Africa, in addition to South
America. Syrian and Lebanese
immigrants to Brazil and Argentina particularly loved Jeanette as she began to
more regularly go by her stage name “Hanan” or “Hanaan.” Television and radio
soon demanded more public appearances and Hanan’s popularity soared. In Argentina,
she and Michel created and recorded several sides on the self-titled
“Hananphone” record label. Michel managed her career and bookings.
Hanan had her own custom label in Argentina called Hananphone. Here are two sides #1002 A Al Loma Loma and # 1002 B Ateba. Courtesy of the Richard M. Breaux collection. https://soundcloud.com/user-356929609-75127210/hananphone-1002-a-al-loma-loma |
In
October 1954, Hanaan and Michel first came to the United States where Hanan
began to tour. Young Arab Americans and Syrian Jews made up the majority of her fan base. Less than a month after her arrival, Hanan had already developed a
large following and appeared on the hafla and mahrajan circuit with Fadwa Abeid,
Anton Abdelahad, Naim Karacand, Philip Solomon, and George and Mike Hamway.
To be sure, she headlined with other Syrian-Lebanese American musicians at the
Saint Nicholas Men’s Club Annual Entertainment and dance on 20 November 1954. When the Caravan newspaper hosted a going away
party for violin virtuoso Sami El Shawa, singers Fadwa Abed, Little Sami Jourdak, and Hanan fronted Emil Kasses, Naim Karacand, Joseph Kattan, and Mike
Hamway. The Syrian American and Lebanese American community in Brooklyn, rang
in the new year with the All-Night Eve Party that included Hanan, Fadwa Abeid,
Russell Bunai, Joe Budway, and Eddie Kochak.
Within
a month’s time, Hanan drew a substantial audience at Saint Basil Catholic
Church’s “Oriental Night” in Pawtucket, Rhode Island. The thirtieth annual
Saint Maron’s Day Banquet at Our Lady of Lebanon Church in Brooklyn reportedly
had to turn away 200 of the 600 people who showed up for the event to hear
Hanan, Sami El Shawa, and Mike Hamway on Sunday, February 13. Seven days later, February
20, 1955, marked the first time Hanan worked and performed with the renowned
Mohammed El Bakkar. Bakkar, in the midst of the media blitz surrounding his role
in the Broadway production of “Fanny” joined Hanan for the “Arabic Hour” radio
program in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Following the success of this broadcast,
Hanan and El- Bakkar teamed up to record at least ten sides on the
independent Cleopatra Records label. From Massachusetts, it was off to two gigs
for the Syrian-Lebanon American Club of Miami for 27 February and 13 March. Fans
enjoyed Hanan’s show so much, she added an additional concert 27 March. Then it
was back to New England by April 24, but this time, the first annual hafli for
the Saint Ann’s Organization in Danbury, Connecticut where Naim Karacand
accompanied her on violin, Mike Hamway played deberke, and Emile Kasses sat in
on oud.
Hanan on the Cleopatra label with an arrangement by Mohammed El Bakkar and a RCA label from Argentina. Cleopatra #821 A Ataba & Mawal is an Arab prayer. Lah-Lah or No! No! is about a person who refuses to follow through on their obvious desire to love someone. Courtesy of the Richard M. Breaux collection. https://soundcloud.com/user-356929609-75127210/hanan-rca-2271-a-lah-lah |
As
if she did not hit the ground running with her US tour, Hanan’s schedule picked
up over the summer months. For example, on June 5, 1955, at Detroit
Institute of the Arts, Hanan performed backed by Jalil Azzouz and Elie Baida at
Middle East Film Company Festival. Meridian, Mississippi’s Cedar Club brought
Hanan for a two-day event the same month, then Saint George Orthodox Church’s
annual outing booked Hanan, Joe Budway, Semi Sheheen, Tony Balrimo, and Elias
Marnady in Uitca, New York, for a 19 of June gig. The event that promised the
largest audience, however, was the Southern Federation of Syrian Lebanese Clubs
25 – 28 of August which included Hanan, Amer Kadaj, Joe Budway, and Al Fahma
as entertainment for the weekend in St. Petersburg, Florida.
Hanan
took the next few months off from performing because she and Michel were
expecting their first child. On 22 November 1955, Hanan gave birth to Claire
Harouni. Just a few months after Claire’s birth, a funny and light hearted
story about the Harouni’s appeared in the Arab American press. Word was that
Claire was quite used to hearing her mother sing, but on an occasion when Hanan
asked Michael to hold the crying baby, he started to sing. The story noted out
of shear “bewilderment or surprise,” Claire stopped crying, but because Michel
was not a great singer, Hanan announced that she’d rather hear the infant’s
wailing over Michel’s. Home life was good at 181 Prospect Park West.
The
New Year, 1956, found Hanan back on the hafla and mahrajan circuit less than
two months after Claire’s birth, the first of these concerts – a New Year’s Eve
Party where Naim Karacand, Emil Kasses, and Tony Tawa accompanied her at the
Club 100. The Holy Name Society of the Virgin Mary Church held its Annual Hafla
& Dance featuring Elie Baida, Hanan, Naim Karacand, Eddie Kochack and his
Orchestra, Joe Budway, Mike Hamway and other musicians 29 January at the
Knights of Columbus Grand Ballroom in Brooklyn. Even though she was a
relatively new mother, Hanan agreed to a plethora of concert dates: the Syrian
Lebanon Club of Miami 26 February and 11 March; the Maronite Society of Detroit,
18 March; the Saint Ann’s Church in Paterson, New Jersey, 7 April; Utica, New
York, on 22 of April; and finally, the Middle East Melody Hour Annual Concert
in Detroit April 29. By the end of the year, Hanan had to slow down a bit because,
once again, she was pregnant.
Two
days into the new year, Hanan gave birth to her second child and first son,
Joseph Michael Harouni, at Saint Claire’s Hospital, nevertheless she was back out
traveling and performing by January’s end. To be sure, on January 27, she sang
at a private hafli in Miami, followed by gigs at the Syrian Lebanon American
Club of Miami on 10 and 17 of February. When possible, she and Michel
vacationed in March and April, so she took things rather slowly. As soon as May
arrived, she returned to her regular routine, this time at a hafli for the
Lebanon American Club of Rochester, New York. Young Arab Americans founded Hanan’s
music extremely relatable and modern. Not surprisingly Hanan, along with Joe
Budway, Fred Elias, and Tony Tawa played the 18th Annual New England
SOYO (Syrian Orthodox Youth Organization) Convention on 10-12 May 1957 in
Worcester, Massachusetts, and the 10th Annual Midwest SOYO in Grand
Rapids, Michigan, 6 July 1957. Other bookings for the year remained the
standard fair halfas and mahrajans around Labor Day and the new year.
Hanan, Karawan, and Elia Baida headlined at the Hosiman Fraternity Gala Hafli in Brooklyn, Caravan 28 April 1960. Courtesy of Newspapers.com |
Perhaps one of Hanan's most popular singles came when she teamed up with an equally young and talented fellow Lebanese singer Fairouz in 1953/1954 on Baida Records #110 A & B, "Ya Samira" & "Ghayb Ya Amr." The harmony when these two collaborated is beautifully unparalleled. (Listen to Hanan & Fairouz on Cliff Bolling's Vintage Arab 78 YouTube site: https://youtu.be/Mp6Uivy5ed0 ).
Hanan
averaged fourteen to twenty performances per year from 1958 to 1961 with
audiences ranging from one hundred to just over one thousand, the family also moved to a bigger place in 1958. Hanan, Michael and the children moved from the Prospect Park West address to 310 Windsor Place. Of course,
US concerts took her to Miami, Florida, Wichita, Kansas, Paterson and
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Long Beach, New Jersey, Tannersville, New York, and
Central Falls, Rhode Island. Larger events, like the SOYO Convention in Bridgeport, Connecticut,
in 1958, the N.G. Beran Veteran’s Association halfi, in Dedham, Massachusetts, and
the Eastern Catholic Rites 2nd Annual meeting in Montreal, 27 June
1959, drew enormous crowds. Hanan also toured accompanied by her two children
and husband in Mexico and Central America between March and April 1958.
Ad for the Silver Jubilee of the Arabian Nights Radio Program included Hanaan, Kahraman, Karawan, Eddie Kochak, and Tony Abdelahad, Caravan 8 May 1958. Courtesy of Newspapers.com |
Period Records released Hanan’s first LP in 1959 titled “The Arabian Nightingale.” Wadih Saffi (oud), Philip Solomon and Hakki Obadia (violin), Ezra James and John Hyder (derbke), Jack Ghannaim (quanun), and Ray Beilouny (riqq) comprised the ensemble for Hanan's first LP. The popularity of her LP translated into bigger and bigger crowds and performances at the SOYO in Montreal 14 May 1961 and at Danny Thomas’ American Lebanese Syrian Associated Charities (ALSAC) Convention in Washington, DC, from 19 to 22 October 1961.
Between
1959 and 1985, Hanan released at least six LPs. Some of these reflected the
trips to and from Lebanon, France, Argentina, and the United States. She sang in Arabic, but also in French and Spanish. The 1960s
proved to be a period of low record productivity and output, but she did manage
to record two sides on a 7” single with Mehdi Zaarour. Return performances and appearances in Lebanon in the 1970s proved Hanan had not missed a beat nor had her fans forgotten her. By 1977, Hanan recorded six songs for “Ya Asma
El Lon” LP on Duniaphon. She followed this up with a rapid succession of LPs on
the Vox De L’Orient label including “Oudoud Medley-25 Years in the USA,” in 1979,
“Latest Songs,” in 1980 and “Izzani Ani Mani Mechmecha” in 1980.
Hanan’s
performance career spanned into the late 1980s and early 1990s. Rare footage of
Hanan singing at a dedication for oudist Joe Budway on 8 September 1980 is easily
locatable on YouTube. As her children
grew up and grandchildren arrived, Hanan assumed the role of family matriarch. After
fleeing the war in Lebanon and moving several times, Hanan’s sister, Aida, immigrated
to the United States in 1985. Aida is a retired real estate agent and community activist who serves on the Board of Saint Nicholas Home. Michel died in 1992 after a severe illness and Hanan remained a loving and supporting wife through these tough times. Hanan, on occasion, sang at haflis in Brooklyn or
garden parties at Saint Nicholas Cathedral, but in 1996 she moved to Staten
Island. On 8 October 2011, Hanan died at the Staten Island University Hospital in Prince's Bay. According to most records she was 81, but some sources suggest she was or may have been 88.
Special thanks to Mark A., Archpriest Thomas Z. and Aida N.
In the early 1990s, I found a copy of THE ARABIAN NIGHTINGALE at a Salvation Army Thrift Store in Newington, Connecticut. I really liked the music but knew nothing about Hanaan until now. So thank you for this detailed biography!
ReplyDeleteTHANK YOU SO MUCH! I have been wanting to hear this my whole life <3
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