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Madonna Louise Veronica Ciccone (born August 16, 1958), simply known by the stage name
Madonna, is a pop singer considered by many to be the queen of
popular music. She has had a long career that has been marked by success
and controversy.
Biography
Madonna on her latest single Hollywood
Madonna from the beginning of her career
Madonna was born on August 16, 1958 in
Bay City, Michigan, USA.
Raised in a large Italian American (and devout Catholic) family, Madonna lost her mother to cancer when she was just a child. She took
classes in piano and ballet, and was an active participant in a variety of artistic activities at school. She received a dance
scholarship and attended the University of Michigan for
two years but quit and moved to the Corona, Queens district of
New York in 1978 to pursue dance and acting
professionally. She appeared in a short film called A Certain
Sacrifice and joined several punk-pop bands including Breakfast Club and Emmy. She eventually penned a number of songs
that brought her local fame in gay dance clubs such as Danceteria.
Madonna scored her first recording deal while sitting on the corner of the bed of an ailing music executive. Her first single
"Everybody" was released without her photo on the jacket. This led many listeners to believe that she was, in fact, black. Thanks
to the advent of MTV, however, her label was able to aggressively market Madonna's image. A
playful and sexy combination of punk and pop culture, Madonna became a quick fixture on the network. Her bleached blonde hair
(with black roots), sexy lace gloves, lingerie on the outside and "Boy Toy" belt buckle were soon all the rage on high streets across America.
Material Girl
In 1983 her self-titled debut album was released, and the first hit "Holiday" topped the
charts around the world. Other hit singles included "Borderline", "Burning Up", "Lucky Star", and "Everybody". The album was a
smash hit, and catapulted Madonna into instant stardom.
In 1984 she followed her debut with Like a Virgin. The album's provocative subject matter (especially the title track) was praised by
reviewers and fans but brought Madonna to the critical attention of the religious right. She aroused further controversy when she appeared at the MTV Video Music Awards singing "Like a Virgin" in a combination
wedding dress/bustier, writhing on the floor and revealing her underwear. The album spawned three number one hits: "Angel",
"Dress You Up", and "Material Girl". (The "Material Girl" moniker would stay with her for some time.)
Madonna's meteoric ascent into the firmament of pop stardom paved the way for her transition to Hollywood. In 1985 she made a brief appearance in the film Vision Quest playing a club singer. (The role seemed designed chiefly to introduce more top ten hits,
namely "Crazy For You" and "Gambler".) She also played a supporting role alongside Rosanna Arquette in the hit film Desperately Seeking
Susan, for which she received good reviews. Her acting generally received negative reviews for the following seven
years.
True Blue
True Blue Cover
On her 27th birthday (August 16, 1985)
Madonna married actor Sean Penn. She appeared with him in the 1986 flop Shanghai Surprise, which
was unanimously panned by critics. The couple soon earned a reputation for hostility towards the media, thanks to Penn's
frequently violent outbursts against the paparazzi. Later in the year Madonna
released her third hit album, True
Blue. This included the hits "Open Your Heart" (accompanied by a video in which she played a stripper who befriends a
young boy), "True Blue", "Live to Tell", "Where's the Party", "La Isla Bonita" (accompanied by a video in which she played a
Spanish woman, the first introduction to the public of her apparent fetish for Latino
culture) and "Papa Don't Preach", an anthem about keeping a baby conceived out of wedlock.
Around this time, a number of black and white nude photos of Madonna surfaced. They were published in both Penthouse and Playboy magazines. The photos
were taken during the early 1980s when she posed for art photographers as a way to make
money. Potentially devastating to her career, she shrugged them off (her unfazed response - "So what?" - was immortalized on a
Ciccone Youth record sleeve) and they only served to fuel her popularity.
At this point Madonna transformed her image, something that would become a trademark for years to come. She began to pale her
face and highlight her beauty spot, replacing her punky bleached blonde hair with a glamorous platinum blonde look reminiscent of
her hero Marilyn Monroe. This coincided with her performance in the
film Who's That Girl, which was also a flop. Nevertheless,
the soundtrack spawned two hits: the title track and "Causing a Commotion".
In 1987 she released an album of dance remixes of some of her earlier material entitled
You Can Dance. It
failed to sell as well as her previous efforts. She also appeared as Hortense in a Broadway production of Bloodhounds of
Broadway, which was harshly dismissed by many reviewers. Critics began to peg Madonna as a thing of the past; her career
seemed to be fading fast.
On September 14, 1989 she divorced
husband Sean Penn, citing spousal abuse.
Like A Prayer
Like a Prayer cover
Then, in 1989, Madonna once again changed her image. She traded in her closely shorn
platinum coif for long, curly black hair and an almost wholesome look for her album Like a Prayer. Returning once more to provocative religious imagery, the title track compared the
experience of lovemaking to praying. The video for the song featured Madonna portraying an apparent streetwalker who witnesses a
violent rape and murder. A black man is falsely
accused of the crime and is jailed. She goes into a church where a statue of St. Martin de Porres comes to life and passionately kisses her. This experience motivates her to identify the
real perpetrator, and the falsely accused black man, who resembles the statue, is released. The video, which also featured
burning crosses, was denounced
by the Vatican for its "blasphemous" mixture of eroticism and Catholic symbolism, and
sparked such controversy that Pepsi Cola, who had paid Madonna millions of dollars for a
commercial endorsement, pulled out of their contract. As the single soared to number one, Madonna thanked them for the
publicity.
The album produced three further American top ten hits - "Express Yourself", "Cherish", and "Keep It Together" - although "Oh
Father" only made the top twenty. A single and animated music video for the track "Dear Jessie" was released in Europe and became
another top ten hit. It also featured a duet with singer Prince
entitled "Love Song".
Madonna's career has been continually marked by controversial episodes in which she has outraged various orthodox segments of
society. Her critics have accused her of deliberately manufacturing controversy in order to market herself and thereby sell more
albums. She has responded to these charges by declaring herself to be "an artist", and therefore free to practice her craft in
whichever manner she chooses.
Movies
In 1990 she starred as Breathless Mahoney in Dick Tracy alongside
Warren Beatty, whom she also briefly dated. She earned some good reviews
for the role though critics pointed out that it continued her tradition of performing well when portraying characters quite
similar to herself (in this case, a demanding and powerful vamp). The film's soundtrack spawned the huge hit "Vogue", which
popularized a dance trend in which people in clubs struck poses like fashion models, and the top ten single "Hanky Panky". She
also released her first greatest hits album, The Immaculate Collection towards the end of 1990. The album was dedicated to
the Pope, her "divine inspiration." She included fifteen of her biggest hits and two new
songs, both top ten hits, "Rescue Me" and "Justify My Love". The latter was co-written by singer Lenny Kravitz. The sexual content of the song, coupled with an erotically charged music video, caused
MTV, who had been so instrumental in Madonna's early success, to ban it. In response, the video was sold stand-alone on
videotape, the first "video single" ever released. In spite of the controversy and the video's still-standing American TV ban,
the "Justify My Love" CD single went on to sell over a million copies (platinum)
and the video single has sold over 400,000 copies, qualifying it as quadruple platinum.
In 1991 Madonna starred in a hit documentary film, Truth or Dare, which chronicled her "Blonde Ambition Tour". In it her personality and private life are explored in intimate detail: the
star comes across as extremely ambitious, demanding, forthright, sexy and smart. It also showed her softer side as she confronted
family members and visited the grave of her mother. Truth or Dare was retitled In Bed with Madonna for its UK
release. This title was parodied by the UK TV show In Bed With
Medinner.
In 1992 Madonna appeared in the Penny Marshall film A League of
Their Own which revolved around a women's baseball team. Her performance was heralded by critics as an impressive return
to the form she'd hinted at in Desperately Seeking Susan, though her character, "All-The-Way Mae", a libidinous vamp,
again seemed to play directly off Madonna's real life. She wrote and performed the movie's theme song, "This Used To Be My
Playground". Its music video featured movie clips, and the song became a huge AC hit and Madonna's tenth Hot 100 number one
single.
Sex and Erotica
1992 also saw the release of her erotic book, Sex. Adult in nature, it featured Madonna as the centerpiece of photographs depicting various sexual
fantasies and acts (including lesbianism, anal sex, sadomasochism and simulated rape). The book was bound in sheet metal and mylar, and came with a CD single of her new song "Erotic", which
was packaged to look like a giant condom.
She released her next album, Erotica, in the same year. Almost a
companion piece to the book, it featured bold sexual anthems that made no attempt to disguise their star's appetite for erotic
fantasy and role-playing. The album spawned a number of top ten hits, including "Erotica" (which became the highest-debuting (#2)
single in the history of the Hot 100 Airplay Chart) and "Deeper And Deeper". Outside of America "Fever" and "Bye Bye Baby" were also
hits, while domestically "Rain" (considered by many to be one of Madonna's finest ballads) and "Bad Girl" went on to achieve
modest chart success.
The music videos from Erotica were groundbreaking in a number of ways. Two different treatments of the title video
were released: an "uncut" European version which featured graphic nudity and overt depiction of sexual acts, and a censored
American version, which contained more suggestive, rapidly changing images, edited in such a way that the most risqué scenes were
obscured or omitted. Despite this, even the expurgated version of the video was deemed too raunchy for America in 1992. Though
the song was a huge hit, the video only aired a total of three times on MTV, always after midnight, and always preceeded by a
warning (issued by Kurt Loder) that viewers should change the channel if S&M and homosexuality were not to their taste.
At present, the censored version of the "Erotica" video has been unbanned by MTV and VH1, and has been aired in its entirety
several times on VH1 and MTV2 within the past 5 or 6 years, not always late at night or early in the morning. Indeed, since
2000, MTV2 has broadcast the video several times in the middle of the afternoon, during
Madonna-related special programming, as occurred around the time of the 2003 release of her
American Life album.
The "Rain" video, one of the first directed by Mark Romanek, was notable
for its frame-by-frame colorization of black and white stock, a painstaking process which lent it a highly stylized appearance.
The "Fever" video, one of Stephane Sednaoui's first, was also well-received, and the video for "Bad Girl", which featured Christopher Walken as an angel, told a disturbing tale of a woman whose
lifestyle leads to her rape and murder.
Reviews of the book and album were, for the most part, unsympathetic, with many critics lambasting the "aging"
provocatrice for her "tasteless" use of sexuality to "shift units". Nevertheless, despite the press brickbats, the book
became an instant bestseller and the album went on to sell more than three million copies worldwide (less than previous albums,
but still a huge hit by anyone else's standards).
The Madonna "industry" appeared to go into overdrive in 1993 when she appeared in a
number of film roles. Body of Evidence was regarded by many commentators as an exercise in soft-core pornography, with Madonna portraying a woman accused of killing her lover by means of
sexual intercourse. The film contained copious nudity and graphic sex scenes. Dangerous Game was similar in
plot and content. Madonna would later comment that this entire period of her life was designed to give the world every single
morsel of what they seemed to be demanding in their invasion of her private life. She hoped that once it was all out in the open,
people could settle down and focus on her work.
Bedtime Stories
Bedtime Stories cover
In 1994 Madonna released Bedtime Stories. The album, which took her back to her R&B roots, found her in sultry voice as she tackled a number of topics which extended far beyond the subject
matter of her early songs. The top ten hit "Secret" told the story of a heterosexual man in love with a transsexual, while "Human
Nature" - which included lines such as: "I'm not sorry / I'm not your bitch" and "Did I say something wrong? Oops, I didn't know
I couldn't talk about sex" - appeared to be directed at the media and critics who had questioned her decisions in recent years.
Other top ten hits included "Bedtime Story", penned by singer Björk, and "Take a Bow",
penned by singer Babyface, who also sang vocals. The album was nominated for a Grammy
in the same year, and Madonna sang "Take a Bow" at the awards.
At the time it was made in 1995, "Bedtime Story", which cost over $2 million, was the
most expensive music video in history. Madonna only held this record for a few months, however, as Michael Jackson's "Scream" video - which cost $7 million and still holds the
record to this day - broke it later that year.
Despite the apparent "maturity" of Bedtime Stories, Madonna seemed in no rush to put her reputation for controversy
behind her. In March 1994 she made an
appearance on The Late Show
With David Letterman in which she repeatedly uttered profanities, saying the word "fuck" 13 times.
In an attempt to improve her acting credentials, Madonna opted over the next few years to take small roles in independent films. She appeared as a singing telegram girl in Blue in the Face (1995) and as a witch in Four Rooms
(1995). She also appeared as a phone sex
company owner in Spike Lee's flop Girl 6 in 1996.
Evita
In a further attempt to soften her image, she released a second greatest hits album in 1996, this time collecting a number of ballads under the title Something to
Remember. She began to wear fashionable designer dresses and softened her (by now medium length) hair to honey blonde.
This may have helped her to secure the coveted role of Eva Perón in the
1996 film Evita. The film marked the first
time Madonna was heralded as an actress in a leading role. She delivered a Golden Globe winning performance and was critically praised; nevertheless, her detractors still managed to
point out the similarities between the character (a former actress and fame-hungry politican's wife) and Madonna's own life.
The Evita soundtrack would go on to become Madonna's twelfth platinum album, thanks to the singles, "Don't Cry For Me
Argentina" and "You Must Love Me", the latter receiving an Oscar nomination for best
original song in a movie. While "You Must Love Me" was a moderate hit on radio and MTV, it
was actually a dance remix of "Don't Cry For Me Argentina" that cemented the soundtrack's mainstream pop success. The remix,
which was only available to fans on the song's maxi-single, was a Top 40, Rythmic, and Hot AC radio smash during early 1997, and helped "Argentina" to peak at #8 on
the Hot 100.
Ray of Light
Ray of Light cover
In 1998 Madonna reinvented herself yet again. During 1996 and 1998 she began studying mystical Judaism and The Kabbalah. She took Yoga lessons and pursued a vigorous exercise regime that brought her body to a peak of toned fitness. She became
pregnant by her then lover, personal trainer Carlos Leon, and bore his child
Lourdes Leon Ciccone in 1996. In 1998 she released Ray of Light, an album co-produced
by European techno music
performer William Orbit. The album became her biggest hit in nearly ten
years, selling over ten million copies. It spawned the top ten singles "Frozen", "Ray of Light", "Drowned World / Substitute For
Love", "Nothing Really Matters" (accompanied by a video in which she portrayed a cross between a clubber and a geisha girl), and "The Power of Goodbye".
Her vocals were notably stronger, likely an after effect of the vocal training she received for Evita. The lyrics were some of Madonna's most introspective. "Mer Girl" dealt with motherhood from the
perspective of a woman who had lost her own mother as a child; "Little Star" was a paean to the wise choices her own daughter
would make in the future; "Swim" addressed the topic of violence in popular culture. Still, critics were quick to note that
Madonna was doing only what she knew best: taking things from the cultures around her (in this case, techno music and Eastern
mysticism) and refining them for mass consumption. Madonna received her first Grammy
award in her 15 year career for Ray of Light.
After endlessly promoting Ray
of Light, Madonna focused next on her pet project, a film called The Next Best Thing.
Co-starring her friend, the openly gay actor Rupert Everett, the film told the story of a heterosexual woman and her gay best friend. After a drunken night of sex they discover she is pregnant, and
decide to raise the child together, but outside romances intervene to cause conflict and estrangement. Critics praised the first
half of the film, but panned the second half in which it assumed the trappings of a courtroom drama. The soundtrack spawned the
top ten hit "American Pie", a dance cover version of the
Don McLean classic. The film itself, released in 2000, was a flop. Madonna contributed the top ten hit "Beautiful Stranger" to the soundtrack of the Austin Powers: the Spy Who Shagged
Me film in the same year.
Music
Music cover
In 2000 Madonna released the album Music. A bona fide commercial and critical hit, it saw Madonna abandon her earlier sexual and religious
themes for throwaway lyrics and the "party" spirit of dance, pop and techno. Music was produced partly by Orbit and
partly by French techno musician Mirwais.
It spawned the top ten hits "Music", "Don't Tell Me", and "What It Feels Like For a Girl". The latter was accompanied by a
striking music video directed by Madonna's then boyfriend, film director Guy
Ritchie. In it Madonna robs an Automatic Teller
Machine, runs over several innocent bystanders, blows up a gas station and eventually commits suicide by driving into a wall.
The video was meant to showcase the fact that when men in film commit violent acts it is accepted, but when women do it just as
mercilessly, it is shunned. Her point was arguably confirmed when the video was banned by MTV. Music was notable for another revamping of Madonna's image, this time as a cross between a disco-loving
party girl and a rustic cowgirl. It started yet another fashion trend, with pink cowboy hats adorned by tiaras cropping up on
high streets and catwalks around the world.
In 2000 Madonna married director Guy
Ritchie and appeared in a short film he directed for BMW called Star. She
released her second Greatest Hits album in 2001, entitled GHV2; unlike her previous greatest hits album, GHV2 featured 15 of her biggest hits from the 1992-2001
period, but did not contain any new songs. Without a single to promote the album, Madonna decided to release a single and video
called the "Thunderpuss GHV2 Megamix". While the megamix earned relatively subdued radio coverage, the innovative video was a
modest success on MTV, MTV2, and VH1. Around the same time, Madonna also began working on a remake of the classic film Swept Away about a wealthy socialite
who, after a shipwreck, is trapped on a deserted island with a poor male servant. The film, released in 2002, was critically panned and went on to become yet another in a string of flops.
In 2002 Madonna continued to make music ("Die Another Day" for the
James Bond film of the same name, in which she had a cameo as Verity, a fencing
instructor), and to act. She seemed to have settled into the role of an Earth Warrior/Mother (she gave birth to her second child,
a son - Rocco - in the same year), spiritualist and elder "stateswoman" of pop. Apparently content with her second marriage, her
career, although only a shadow of what it was in the mid 1980s, continued to keep her in the limelight.
American Life
American Life cover
Her artistic reputation appeared to take a turn for the worse, however, when the critical drubbing she received for Swept
Away was followed by an equally brutal critical reception for her 2003 album
American Life. Critics described the album as "tired", monotonous, and an indication that she was "in need of a
vacation" from the stress of her career. In yet another move that followed her pattern of creating "controversy" in the wake of
an album's release, she filmed a music video for the album that included a
scene of her tossing a hand grenade into the lap of a President George W.
Bush lookalike. The video was revoked, presumably at her own request, on the
day it premiered (it was aired for only a few hours) and replaced by a more "neutral" treatment. Almost immediately after this
incident, the online world was surprised and amused when marketers and promoters of her album attempted to disrupt the Internet file sharing networks by
uploading a large number of "junk" musical files bearing her name. Instead of downloading an actual Madonna song, seekers of
online music instead found themselves downloading a file of Madonna saying, "What the fuck do you think you're doing?". The
Madonna Remix
Project took this file and added music to mock Madonna's attempt to "inspire guilt" in peer-to-peer users. [1]
Famous for her appearances at the MTV Video Music Awards, in 2003 Madonna provoked the
public once again by kissing Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera on stage while the three singers performed a medley
of "Like A Virgin" and her most recent single, "Hollywood". The design resembled Madonna's performance of "Like A Virgin" at the
1984 VMA's: the same wedding cake set, wedding dresses and "Boy Toy" belt worn by Madonna in 1984 now adorned Aguilera and
Spears, who many believe - not least the pop "princesses" themselves - to be the heirs and beneficiaries of Madonna's pop
legacy.
Current Events
In 2004 Madonna embarked on a world tour. In June of 2004 she was forced to cancel three of her Arabic tour dates after
recieving terrorist threats that she and her two children would be murdered if she entered those countries. She legally changed
her name to "Edith Richie," citing religious reasons. After a brief battle with Warner Bros. Music (with whom she shared her
record label "Maverick" at a percentage of 40/60 respectively,) Madonna sold her shares in the label and is no longer involved in
it's dealings. She has embarked on her "Reinvention" tour, and is authoring spiritually charged children's books like "Yakov and
the Seven Thieves" and "The Adventures of Abdi".
In June 2004, Madonna announced that she had adopted the name Esther, in reference
to the ancient Persian Queen who helped the
Jewish people, and is now studying Kabbalah. In an interview with ABC, she said "This is in no way a negation of
who my mother is. ... I wanted to attach myself to the energy of a different name."
Trivia
- Brother Christopher
Ciccone is an interior designer to the stars.
- Her own record label, Maverick Records, is responsible for the
success of such stars as Alanis Morissette, Meshell Ndegeocello and
The Prodigy.
- Performed with the Alvin Ailey dance troupe.
- Has been condemned by the Puerto Rican House of Representatives (for pulling a Puerto Rican flag across her genitals).
- Was offered Meryl Streep's role in Music of the Heart and Sharon Stone's role in Casino but turned both down. (Streep
& Stone were each nominated for an Oscar for these roles.)
- Has an IQ of 140.
- Has sold 153 million albums worldwide.
- Designer Stella McCartney, daughter of Paul and Linda, was Matron of Honor at Madonna's second wedding. Actress Gwyneth Paltrow was apparently the first choice but decided against it.
- Revealed that Sean Penn was the greatest love of her life in the documentary Truth or Dare.
Discography
Madonna's albums with some of the main singles from each album.
Studio Albums
- 1983 Madonna ("Holiday", "Lucky Star", ...) [released outside America as:
The First Album
- 1984 Like A Virgin ("Material Girl", "Angel", ...)
- 1986 True Blue ("Papa Don't Preach", "La Isla Bonita", ...)
- 1989 Like A Prayer ("Express Yourself", "Cherish", ...)
- 1990 I'm Breathless - Music From And Inspired By The Film "Dick Tracy"
("Vogue", "Hanky Panky", ...)
- 1992 Erotica ("Erotica", "Fever", "Rain", "Deeper and Deeper", "Bye-Bye Baby",
...)
- 1994 Bedtime Stories ("Secret", "Take A Bow", "Bedtime Story", "Human Nature",
...)
- 1998 Ray Of Light ("Ray of Light", "Frozen", "The Power Of Goodbye", "Drowned
World / Substitute For Love", "Nothing Really Matters", ...)
- 2000 Music ("Music", "Don't Tell Me", "What It Feels Like For a Girl",
...)
- 2003 American Life ("American Life", "Hollywood", "Nobody Knows Me", "Love
Profusion" ...)
Compilations
- 1987 You Can Dance ("Spotlight", "Into The Groove", ...)
- 1990 The Immaculate Collection ("Vogue", "Into The Groove", "Material Girl"
...)
- 1995 Something To Remember ("This Used To Be My Playground", "Oh Father",
"I'll Remember" ...)
- 2001 GHV2: Greatest Hits Volume 2 ("Beautiful Stranger", "Human Nature", "Ray
Of Light" ...)
- 2003 Remixed & Revisited (E.P. featuring unreleased tracks and rock and
roll versions of "American Life" singles)
Soundtracks
- 1985 Vision Quest ("Gambler", "Crazy For You")
- 1987 Who's That Girl - Original Motion Picture Soundtrack ("Who's That Girl",
"Causing A Commotion", ...)
- 1994 Music from the Motion Picture Soundtrack "With Honors" ("I'll
Remember")
- 1996 Evita - The Complete Motion Picture Music Soundtrack ("Don't Cry For Me
Argentina", "You Must Love Me" ...)
- 1999 Music from the Motion Picture "Austin Powers - The Spy Who Shagged Me"
("Beautiful Stranger")
- 2000 Music from the Motion Picture "The Next Best Thing" ("American Pie",
"Time Stood Still")
- 2002 Music from the MGM Motion Picture "Die Another Day" ("Die Another
Day")
Other Albums
- 1989 The Early Years ("On The Street", "Wild Dancing", ...) [no singles]
- 1996 Pre-Madonna ("Laugh To Keep From Crying", "Don't You Know?", ...) [no
singles]
- 1998 In The Beginning (contains the same tracks as Pre-Madonna)
Filmography
External links
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