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in
Bucharest. While an aeronautics student, someone advised him to put his musical talent to use and make some recordings. At that moment, music became his profession. He made his performing debut in 1929 at the Zissu bar on Șerban Vodă Street, Bucharest. He would spontaneously create epigrams for
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then gaining ascendancy. Not wishing to serve the régime, he managed to flee to the United States in 1945. Arriving in New York City, he worked as a hotel porter, investing the money he earned into a small musical ensemble. With this group he continued playing the songs that brought him renown in
227:("101 Naughty Sayings"). Around this time he also made his first gramophone recordings and first appeared on radio. He took music lessons in 1930, passed an examination and was confirmed as a professional artist. H. Nicolaide hired him at the Alhambra Revue Theatre, where he sang in the operettas
179:, where he opened a pastry shop and then worked as a jeweller, like one of his sisters. Jean Moscopol was born in Brăila, where he showed ease of learning from his early days. He could play several instruments (including the
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fluently. His first formal education took place at Brăila's Greek school, and he continued learning in that city, also taking classes at its Lyra conservatory, before graduating from the
Pelarinos High School in
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From 1921–22, he was a clerk at the M. Embiricos et Co
Maritime Agency. He then spent two years at the P. Macri et Son Agency in Brăila, and from 1925 to 1929 worked at the
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Jean
Moscopol (real name: Ioan Moscu, 1903–1980) was a well-known Romanian singer of the interwar period, who spent his last years in the United States.
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met with great difficulties when he sought information about
Moscopol for a biographical film; few archival documents about him remained.
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Content in this edit is translated from the existing
Romanian Knowledge article at ]; see its history for attribution.
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1930s
Bucharest, as well as anti-communist and exile-themed music. He played an active role in the Saint Dumitru
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lessons with
Professor Korst. In 1943 he played the part of the Armenian in
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the clients and banter with them. He also published a book of epigrams,
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In the 1970s, Moscopol recorded a series of songs with the help of
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parish. He died in exile in 1980, never having married.
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a machine-translated version of the
Romanian article.
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