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Some Fun Facts About
Madonna
Madonna Biography:
After a star reaches a certain
point, it's easy to forget what they became famous
for and concentrate solely on their persona. Madonna
is such a star. Madonna rocketed to stardom so
quickly in 1984 that it obscured most of her musical
virtues. Appreciating her music became even more
difficult as the decade wore on, as discussing
her lifestyle became more common than discussing
her music. However, one of Madonna's greatest
achievements is how she manipulated the media
and the public with her music, her videos, her
publicity, and her sexuality. Arguably, Madonna
was the first female pop star to have complete
control of her music and image.
Madonna moved from her native
Michigan to New York in 1977, with dreams of becoming
a ballet dancer. She studied with choreographer
Alvin Ailey and modeled. In 1979, she became part
of the Patrick Hernandez Revue, a disco outfit
that had the hit "Born to Be Alive."
She traveled to Paris with Hernandez; it was there
that she met Dan Gilroy, who would soon become
her boyfriend. Upon returning to New York, the
pair formed the Breakfast Club, a pop/dance group.
Madonna originally played drums for the band,
but she soon became the lead singer. In 1980,
she left the band and formed Emmy with her former
boyfriend, drummer Stephen Bray. Soon, Bray and
Madonna broke off from the group and began working
on some dance/disco-oriented tracks. A demo tape
of these tracks worked its way to Mark Kamins,
a New York-based DJ/producer. Kamins directed
the tape to Sire Records, who signed the singer
during 1982.
Kamins produced Madonna's first
single, "Everybody," which became a
club and dance hit at the end of 1982; her second
single, 1983's "Physical Attraction,"
was another club hit. In June of 1983, she had
her third club hit with the bubbly "Holiday,"
which was written by Jellybean Benitez. Madonna's
self-titled debut album was released in September
of 1983; "Holiday" became her first
Top 40 hit the following month. "Borderline"
became her first Top Ten hit in March of 1984,
beginning a remarkable string of 17 consecutive
Top Ten hits. While "Lucky Star" was
climbing to number four, Madonna began working
on her first starring role in a feature film,
Susan Seidelman's Desperately Seeking Susan.
Madonna's second album, the
Niles Rodgers-produced Like a Virgin, was released
at the end of 1984. The title track hit number
one in December, staying at the top of the charts
for six weeks; it was the start of a whirlwind
year for the singer. During 1985, Madonna became
an international celebrity, selling millions of
records on the strength of her stylish, sexy videos,
and forceful personality. After "Material
Girl" became a number two hit in March, Madonna
began her first tour, supported by the Beastie
Boys. "Crazy for You" became her second
number one single in May. Desperately Seeking
Susan was released in July, becoming a box-office
hit; it also prompted a planned video release
of A Certain Sacrifice, a low-budget erotic drama
she filmed in 1979. A Certain Sacrifice wasn't
the only embarrassing skeleton in the closet dragged
into the light during the summer of 1985 -- both
Playboy and Penthouse published nude photos of
Madonna that she posed for in 1977. Nevertheless,
her popularity continued unabated, with thousands
of teenage girls adopting her sexy appearance,
being dubbed "Madonna Wannabes." In
August, she married actor Sean Penn; the couple
had a rocky marriage that ended in 1989.
Madonna began collaborating
with Patrick Leonard at the beginning of 1986;
Leonard would co-write most of her biggest hits
in the '80s, including "Live to Tell,"
which hit number one in June of 1986. A more ambitious
and accomplished record than her two previous
albums, True Blue was released the following month,
to both more massive commercial success (it was
a number one in both the U.S. and the U.K., selling
over five million copies in America alone) and
critical acclaim. "Papa Don't Preach"
became her fourth number one hit in the U.S. While
her musical career was thriving, her film career
took a savage hit with the November release of
Shanghai Surprise. Starring Madonna and Sean Penn,
the comedy received terrible reviews, which translated
into disastrous box-office returns.
At the beginning of 1987, she
had her fifth number one single with "Open
Your Heart," the third number one from True
Blue alone. The title cut from the soundtrack
of her third feature film, Who's That Girl?, was
another chart-topping hit, although the film itself
was another box-office bomb. 1988 was a relatively
quiet year for Madonna, as she spent the first
half of the year acting in David Mamet's +Speed
the Plow on Broadway. In the meantime, she released
the remix album You Can Dance. After withdrawing
the divorce papers she filed at the beginning
of 1988, she divorced Penn at the beginning of
1989.
Like a Prayer, released in the
spring of 1989, was her most ambitious and far-reaching
album, incorporating elements of pop, rock, and
dance. It was another number one hit and launched
the number-one title track, and "Express
Yourself," "Cherish," and "Keep
It Together," three more Top Ten hits. In
April 1990, she began her massive Blonde Ambition
tour, which ran throughout the entire year. "Vogue"
became a number one hit in May, setting the stage
for her co-starring role in Warren Beatty's Dick
Tracy; it was her most successful film appearance
since Desperately Seeking Susan. Madonna released
a greatest-hits album, The Immaculate Collection,
at the end of the year. It featured two new songs,
including the number one single "Justify
My Love," which sparked another controversy
with its sexy video; the second new song, "Rescue
Me," became the highest-debuting single by
a female artist in U.S. chart history, entering
the charts at number 15. Truth or Dare, a documentary
of the Blonde Ambition tour, was released to positive
reviews and strong ticket sales during the spring
of 1991.
Madonna returned to the charts
in the summer of 1992 with the number one "This
Used to Be My Playground," a single featured
in the film A League of Their Own, which featured
the singer in a small part. Later that year, Madonna
released -Sex, an expensive, steel-bound soft-core
pornographic book that featured hundreds of erotic
photographs of herself, several models, and other
celebrities -- including Isabella Rossellini,
Big Daddy Kane, Naomi Campbell, and Vanilla Ice
-- as well as selected prose. -Sex received scathing
reviews and enormous negative publicity, yet that
didn't stop the accompanying album, Erotica, from
selling over two million copies. Bedtime Stories,
released two years later, was a more subdued affair
than Erotica. Initially, it didn't chart as impressively,
prompting some critics to label her a has-been,
yet the album spawned her biggest hit, "Take
a Bow," which spent seven weeks at number
one. It also featured the Björk-penned "Bedtime
Stories," which became her first single not
to make the Top 40; its follow-up, "Human
Nature," also failed to crack the Top 40.
Nevertheless, Bedtime Stories, marked her seventh
album to go multi-platinum.
Beginning in 1995, Madonna began
one of her most subtle image makeovers as she
lobbied for the title role in the film adaptation
of Andrew Lloyd Webber's +Evita. Backing away
from the overt sexuality of Erotica and Bedtime
Stories, Madonna recast herself as an upscale
sophisticate, and the compilation Something to
Remember fit into the plan nicely. Released in
the fall of 1995, around the same time she won
the coveted role of Evita Peron, the album was
comprised entirely of ballads, designed to appeal
to the mature audience that would also be the
target of Evita. As the filming completed, Madonna
announced she was pregnant and her daughter, Lourdes,
was born late in 1996, just as Evita was scheduled
for release. The movie was greeted with generally
positive reviews and Madonna began a campaign
for an Oscar nomination that resulted in her winning
the Golden Globe for Best Actress (Musical or
Comedy), but not the coveted Academy Award nomination.
The soundtrack for Evita, however, was a modest
hit, with a dance remix of "Don't Cry for
Me Argentina" and the newly written "You
Must Love Me" both becoming hits.
During 1997, she worked with
producer William Orbit on her first album of new
material since 1994's Bedtime Stories. The resulting
record, Ray of Light, was heavily influenced by
electronica, techno, and trip-hop, thereby updating
her classic dance-pop sound for the late '90s.
Ray of Light received uniformly excellent reviews
upon its March 1998 release and debuted at number
two on the charts. Within a month, the record
was shaping up to be her biggest album since Like
a Prayer. Two years later she returned with Music,
which reunited her with Orbit and also featured
production work from Mark "Spike" Stent
and Mirwais, a French electro-pop producer/musician
in the vein of Daft Punk and Air.
The year 2000 also saw the birth
of Madonna's second child, Rocco, who she had
with filmmaker Guy Ritchie; the two married at
the very end of the year. With Ritchie as director
and Madonna as star, the pair released a remake
of the film Swept Away in 2002. It tanked at the
box office, failing to crack seven digits, making
it one of the least profitable films of the year.
Her sober 2003 album, American Life, fared a little
better but was hardly a huge success. That same
year she released a successful children's book,
-The English Roses, which was followed by four
more over the coming years. The album Confessions
on a Dance Floor from 2005 was her return to music
and to the dance-oriented material that had made
her a star.
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