For thirteen years, the son of Michèle Torr, Romain, has suffered from multiple sclerosis. His mother gives her news and says she is “admiring” of the fight led by her son.
Michèle Torr, famous for her interpretations of “Take me to dance”, “My name is Michèle”, “A Little Frenchwoman” or “I appeal to tenderness”, confided in Var Morning on the state of health of his son, Romain, who has been fighting multiple sclerosis for thirteen years. She took the opportunity to announce the holding of a concert event, in which she participates every year. “Thanks to the wonderful welcome from the managers of the Partouche casino, I will be on stage in Hyères on July 10, she specifies. With my friends, we will sing for a good cause.”
Michèle Torr on stage for her son and illness
It has now been thirteen years since the singer’s life was turned upside down, along with the health of her son. Romain Vidal, show producer, was diagnosed in 2007 with multiple sclerosis following an MRI. Now he lives in a wheelchair. “He doesn’t give up, breath Michele Torr. He created and chairs the Multiple Sclerosis association in the Aix region to raise funds to advance research..”
To help her son and research, Michèle Torr organizes a concert alongside her friends Dave and Jeane Manson, in particular. It will be the 7and edition of the event. “I do everything I can, every year, to offer this concert event surrounded by my friends who give their voice and their time. As long as I can help her, I do. I do not hesitate to display and tow”she announces.
A fundraiser for the disease
The choice of the city of Hyères was not made by chance. “It is here, in Hyères and more precisely in Pomponiana, that my son comes to spend between 3 and 4 weeks in the spring, says Michèle Torr. It does him a lot of good and for all these years, he has found his friends there. Romain retains an extraordinary dynamism and will. He doesn’t feel sorry for himself and he gives a hell of a life lesson to others!”
All funds raised during the concert will be donated to the association. “It is important to provide daily assistance to the sick so that they can live better. We thus collaborate with the PACASEP network, which aims to optimize the specific management of multiple sclerosis in the PACA region. The association is chaired by Professor Jean Pelletier, head of the neurology department at La Timone University Hospital in Marseille, to whom we have already given donations..”
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