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New Brunswick

Serge Brideau, outrageous frontman for ECMA winners Les Htesses d'Hilaire

Moncton rockers Les Htesses d'Hilaire, winners of two ECMAs in Saint John this week, feature the zany frontman Serge Brideau.

'A 350-pound man with a beard wearing a dress always puts a smile on your face'

Les Hotesses d'Hilaire perform at the 2017 East Coast Music Awards gala on Thursday. The band won group recording and francophone recording of the year awards for the album Touche-moi pas l! (Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press)

If fans watching the East Coast Music Awards gala Thursday night weren't already familiar with Moncton group Les Htesses d'Hilaire, they sure know them now.

In a show-stopping, jaw-dropping performance, plus two side-splitting acceptance speeches, the outrageous frontman Serge Brideau left his mark on host city Saint John.

He took a shot at internet providers not paying musicians enough for content, mock-thanked "our lord and saviour, Irving," and hoisted Premier Brian Gallant, who was presenting them their trophy for group recording of the year.

All that, in drag.

"A 350-pound man with a beard wearing a dress always puts a smile on your face," said Brideau.

Serge Brideau of Les Htesses d'Hilaire picks up Premier Brian Gallant as he presents the band with the group recording of the year award at the 2017 East Coast Music Awards gala in Saint John. (Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press)
Dressed a lot more conservatively offstage, Brideau explained where the band's name came from, and his political side as well.

"Hilaire is my father," he said. "He's 80 years old this year, and he's a rare guy of his age. A very proud NDPer, a worker, he was a carpenter, he was in the workers' union. He always spoke his mind, all the time, maybe too much some time.

"I feel it's a privilege to be on the stage, and to have a microphone in front of my face. There are some things that are absurd in our economic system, our political system, and if we don't talk about it we could put our heads in the sand and be Donald Trumps about it and say global warming doesn't exist, but it does, you know."

Breaking bilingually

The group is a smash in Acadie and Quebec, and increasingly popular in English markets.

Anglophones don't have too much trouble getting the politics and the zaniness.

Les Htesses d'Hilaire are named after lead singer Serge Brideau's 80-year-old father, Hilaire. (Krissy Holmes/CBC)
"Between songs, we speak in English, and we like to make fun, and we like to have fun," Brideau said. "It's a whole show."

Switching back and forth between the serious and the comic is second nature for him.

"I was a paramedic for 16 years in Moncton, and there was always that (comic) side," he said. "I'd work with my partners, and we'd joke a lot, and then you'd go on call and you're serious. I guess it's my personality. Life is short, and you gotta laugh."

Les Htessesd'Hilairehave a showcase performance at the ECMAs on Saturday, playingat the Trade and Convention Centre on the UPS Rock Stage, with the doors open at 10:30 p.m.