Laeticia "tries" to negotiate with David and Laura



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Laeticia Hallyday, October 16, 2018, in Paris. – P LE FLOCH / SIPA

"It's complicated," she said cryptically. In full promotion for the posthumous album of her late husband at the 20 Hours of TF1 this Friday,
Laeticia Hallyday dropped a few words on
the dispute with David and Laura concerning Johnny's will. " We try. There is a lot of hatred, scorn, humiliation, lies that hurt you. It's hard to hear, it's hard to suffer. "

"My country is love", the posthumous album of Johnny Hallyday sold on Friday to 300,000 physical copies (CD and vinyl), an outsized figure for the French market for a first day of marketing, announced to AFP the Warner record label. "It's an album that was made in pain, in the fight against this disease. It was the album of resilience, courage, determination to say something, want to talk about her freedom of thought, her fury of living and then love, "she said. "He hung up on this album to lead this fight" against cancer, she added.

A difficult return to France

Asked about the concessions she was ready to make, Laeticia replied, "A lot of things, but I think they are intimate things. I do not really want to talk about it tonight. " For her, "it's really a story that could have stayed with family, in dignity and modesty". "It was so violent for me, for Jade and Joy (the couple's two daughters, editor's note) not to have had a single phone call, to be sued" by David and Laura last February. she said.

Returning to Johnny's will, she noted that her husband "felt that he had protected David and Laura during his lifetime, that he had made donations during his lifetime, through flats, houses" and "that they were armed to build and live, while Jade and Joy are very small. " "It's a choice of love, it's a choice to want to protect her two little girls," she continued.

Laeticia also said that his return to France for the release of the album, in the house of Marnes-la-Coquette, near Paris, where Johnny died, was "very complicated". "I never thought we would lose this war, either," she said, moved. "It was not his first cancer, it was his third cancer, and he overcame them with so much courage, humility and modesty."

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