Madonna Biography

Madonna Biography
Birth name: Madonna Louise Veronica Ciccone
Date of birth: 16 August 1958; Bay City, Michigan, USA
Height: 5' 4"
Married to: Guy Ritchie (22 December 2000 - present); 1 child
Family:
Father: Sylvio Ciccone, design engineer for Chrysler/General Motors
Mother: Madonna Ciccone; died of breast cancer when Madonna was six
Stepmother: Joan
Brother: Martin, deejay; older
Brother: Anthony, TV production assistant
Sister: Paula Mae, producer; younger
Brother: Christopher, artist; younger
Sister: Melanie Henry, publicist for Opal Records; younger; married to singer Joe Henry
Half-sister: Jennifer Ciccone; younger
Half-brother: Mario Ciccone; younger
Daughter: Lourdes Maria Ciccone Leon; born October 14, 1996; father, Carlos Leon
Son: Rocco Ritchie; born August 11, 2000; father, Guy Ritchie
Factoids: According to Billboard, Madonna has had more number-one singles (11 in all) than any other female artist
Named one of People's worst-dressed, September 20, 1999
Education: University of Michigan; Dance, attended on scholarship for two years
Agency: Creative Artists Agency
Madonna was born on the 16th of August 1958 in Rochester, Michigan, USA. Her family lived in Pontiac, Michigan at the time, but were visiting grandmother in Bay City when Madonna decided to appear in the world. She was christened Madonna Louise Ciccone, but her family used to called her 'Little Nonni'. When she was only five years old the mother she loved died of breast cancer. Madonna talks: "One of the hardest thing I've faced in my life was the death of my mother and that's something I really haven't got over to this day." Madonna learnt to be strong and independent early in life and she carries a clear memory of her mother's courage: "She tried to keep her fear deep down inside and not let us know - she never complained".
When the mother died the Ciccone family was torn apart. Madonna and her brothers and sisters were sent to live with various relatives until, after a couple of years to Madonna's horror, her father Tony married their housekeeper Joan Gustafson- a real disciplinarian. Her father insisted that the children have to call his new wife 'mother' but Madonna found that very hard to do. In fact, she never called Joan mother. Madonna was the oldest girl of eight children and that is the reason she caught most of the responsibility. Madonna remembers: "As the oldest girl in my family, I felt like all my adolescence was spent taking care of babies. I think that's when I really thought about how I wanted to get away from all that. I saw myself as the quintessential Cinderella." And about his father Madonna says: "If we didn't have school homework then father find us something do to around the house - he was very adamant about us being productive." And also, "If my father hadn't been so strict I wouldn't be who I am today."
When Madonna was small, she loved to hum along to songs on the radio as she helped with the housework. She remembers: "There was always music in our house, either records or the radio or someone singing on the bathtub." Soon her father wanted her to take piano lessons, because most of the family played an musical instrument and his father was really big on that. This was not to be, Madonna was her father's favorite and persuaded him to let her take dance lessons instead!
Madonna was 12 years old, when she entered the local Catholic high school [Saint Andrews, Saint Fredericks, Academie Du Sacre Coeur]. It was oppressive and she recalls "they would hit you across the back with a stapler if you were disobedient". It was at this school though that she learnt a great deal from classes in tap, jazz dancing, Baton twirling and Gymnastics. It was here that she started to display the extrovert Madonna which hitherto only her family had experienced. "I wanted to do everything everybody told me I couldn't do, I couldn't wear make up, I couldn't wear nylons, I couldn't cut my hair, I couldn't go on dates, I couldn't even go to the movies with my friends". She craved attention by wearing odd socks, appearing in a friend's home movie with a fried egg on her stomach. She also appeared in a local talent contest where she danced to a record by 'The Who' wearing only a bikini and body paint.
As said before, she wanted to do everything she was told she shouldn't or couldn't. She'd roll up her uniform skirt until it was short, She'd go into the bathroom and put make-up and nylon stockings on. She was incredibly flirtatious. Apart from being a flirtatious rebel, Madonna was very good at her schoolwork. Madonna remembers "I was really competitive in school with my grades and stuff coz my father used to give us rewards if we got "A" on our report cards. It wasn't so much that I was interested in learning.....my father gave us 25 cents for every "A" that we got so I wanted to earn the most amount of money." Not so surprisingly Madonna shone in the school's theatre department, where she was given the lead role in several of their productions. After Madonna left school she attended the University of Michigan on a dance scholarship, where she studied under ballet school owner, Chris Flynn. She recalls "I really loved him. He was my mentor, my father, my imaginary lover, everything."
Pretty soon after studying some time in the university of Michigan Madonna wanted to go to New York to chase her dreams. Everyone was against the idea but her dance teacher said, "Go for it!" - and luckily for us she did! So there she was, finally in New York, standing in the middle of Times Square (on arriving in the big city she had asked the taxi driver to take her to 'the middle of everything'), with just thirty five dollars, a satchel full of tights, dance shoes under one arm and a giant doll under the other. Madonna remembers: "When I came to New York it was the first time I'd ever taken a plane, the first time I've ever gotten a taxi-cab, the first time for everything. And I came here with 35 dollars in my pocket. It was the bravest thing I'd ever done. My goal was to conquer the city and I feel I have." And also "Although I took to New York straight away I was really lonely.
I would take whatever I could in a taxi-cab to wherever I was going to next. I'd take a big breath, grit my teeth, blink back my tears and say, "I'm gonna do it- I have to do it because there's nowhere else for me to go". This was the start of hard times for Madonna. She lived in terrible house, cuz Madonna hadn't money for better. She remembers: "When my father first came to visit me, he was mortified. The place was crawling with cockroaches. There was winos in the hallways, and the entire place smelled like stale beer" Then she won a scholarship at the Alvin Ailey Dance Theatre, where she spent two years working hard at her classes during the day and even harder at night, holding down a succession of part-time jobs in fast food restaurants to make a little extra money.
Sometimes she also visited a club called the "Blue Froggie", the bar where she first met Steve Bray. Who was a talented musician but his relationship with Madonna was more on the physical plane. After a while Madonna realized that the way to the top for her was not going to be through pure modern dance. It wasn't the competition that put her off but the lack of work opportunities. There were too many people going after too few jobs. She started auditioning for theatre and musical parts and ended up being whisked away to Paris, where she was to take part in a revue backing the lead singer Patrick Hernadez. Hernadez's management realized they had something special on their hands with Madonna, but were too slow to do anything about it and when she complained they would give her more money - they didn't. So it was goodbye to Paris and hello again to New York.
Madonna returned to New York with a fiery determination to succeed in the music industry. She moved in again with Dan Gilroy, an old boyfriend. He and some friends that they had met while at dance school, had got a group together called 'The Breakfast Band' - they needed a drummer, so Madonna filled the gap. She then persuaded Dan to write some songs for her to sing as the group's lead singer.
After she had been with them a few months she realized that they were getting nowhere and so went off alone to form her own band with herself as the lead singer. During the following few months they played a succession of dodgy New York clubs to establish a name for themselves on the music circuit. It wasn't easy. The band went through many changes of it's membership and name. At the time the clubs were more interested in Punk and New Wave stuff but Madonna plugged away at it. She was offered the occasional bit of modeling work and a part in a shortm(60 min) 'art' film called 'A Certain Sacrifice'.
Madonna finally got a deal with Gotham Records, worth one hundred dollars a week. Steve Bray went with her as drummer and songwriter. She kept at it and eventually got a record deal with 'Sire Records' for only $5000 and released her first single 'Everybody'. When it was first played on the radio and in clubs, many fans mistook Madonna for an Afro-American disco diva. Record company also didn't put Madonna's picture on this single's cover, they wanted people think that she was Afro-American, to sell more records. 'Everybody' sold over 250 000 copies and went to No.3 in the dance charts. John 'Jellybean' Benitez found Madonna the song 'Holiday' which was an instant hit, but Madonna first hit the top ten with "Borderline". It's rumored that her vocals were mechanically altered to make her sound more girlie. Her first album 'Madonna', released in 1983 won her wide acclaim and millions of fans, plus invitations to move into films.
Not only was Madonna setting the tone music wise, she was also creating a whole new fashion. In "Lucky Star" music video, she showcased her Boy Toy image. Madonna's style was so popular that world famous lingerie store 'Fredericks of Hollywood' reported a 40 % increase in sales, which they put down to the Material Girl's image.
Never letting an opportunity to make a fast buck pass her by, Madonna set up her own "Wazoo" clothing label. Among other things, "Wazoo" manufactured rubber bracelets and Boy Toy belt buckles. It wasn't long before millions of girl fans the world over took on the raggy clothes of their number 1 pop heroine. But it wasn't just the clothes that were developing Madonna's raunchy reputation. Her music was about to take a new and controversial turn. The new album 'Like A Virgin' (1984) established Madonna as a popular artist and soon nearly everyone had a copy of this album.
It gained 3X platina status in the US charts immediately! Interesting is, that Madonna's first album 'Madonna'(1938) was still doing pretty good at the charts when new album was released. The year 1985 was VERY busy for Madonna. The music video 'Material Girl' came out on the 1st of February, the movie "Vision Quest" on February 15th and the movie "Desperately Seeking Susan" on March 29th. Her role in "Desperately Seeking Susan" added a significant facet to her image. Madonna's singles: "Material Girl" and "Crazy For You "(from 'Vision Quest' movie soundtrack) were both top five hits. "Crazy for you" gave Madonna her first Grammy nomination. Madonna's first big tour (she traveled trough whole US) was named after her album- "The Virgin Tour"(1985).
It went from smaller venues to sold-out arenas in a matter of months. During "Material Girl" video shooting she met Sean Penn. And just after saying "I wouldn't wish being Mr. Madonna on anyone", she married with him. Madonna remembers "I was jumping up and down on my bed, performing one of my morning rituals and all of a sudden Sean gets this look in his eye and all of a sudden I knew what he was thinking.
I said: whatever you`re thinking I`ll say yes to. That was his chance, so he popped it." On the 16th of August, 1985- they married in a Malibu media circus, 13 helicopters with paparazzi photographers were soaring in circles during the wedding ceremony, the groom Sean Penn tried to beat some paparazzi photographers, who were spying in the bushes. Madonna remembers: "I didn't think I was going to be married with 13 helicopters flying over my head, it turned into a circus. At first I was outraged but at the end I was laughing."
Madonna's marriage to Sean Penn officially ended on 10th of January,1989 when Madonna - for the second time - filed for divorce on the grounds of irreconcilable differences. She did not get married again until just recently when she married Guy Ritchie.
Since year 1985, Madonna is known as a person who can do anything: she is a singer, an actress, a composer, a producer and an executive. Madonna has success everywhere. She has broken every available radio, video, sales, and box-office record, racking up no fewer than 29 Top Ten singles, 11 of those reaching No. 1.It's world record! 1994's "Take A Bow," lodged in the top spot for seven consecutive weeks and beat the performance of her 1984 breakthrough, "Like A Virgin," which had a six-week run at the top.
All told, Madonna's No. 1 and No. 2 singles have spent a total of 40 weeks at the top of the charts -- almost a solid year of uninterrupted hits! Every studio album she has released has reached Top 15. All, but one has made it into the Top 10, and seven have attained Top 5 status. Madonna's international album sales are estimated at topping 120 million units. Pivotal as recorded music is to Madonna's unparalleled success, she has had more videos, played more often, than any other artist in the history of the MTV network. Multi-awarded for these videos, Madonna has made a ground-breaking contribution to the video art form, as she has in her unstoppable sell-out music tours that combine music, theatrics, spectacle, and dazzling charisma and have packed stadiums globally for nearly two decades.
Those big heartbreakers mean of course big money and that's why (according to several business magazines) Madonna is the richest woman in the world followed closely by Oprah Winfrey. Madonna makes about 130 millions US$ for a year !!! Continuously released albums, singles, music- videos and movies hold Madonna's myth high.
As if she wasn't busy enough already, Madonna dropped another bundle of joy into the world in September. No, not another child. This time, Madonna delivered Music, her first full-length album since the Grammy-winning Ray of Light. It was, of course, a huge hit, but much more than anyone could have expected. Music entered the album sales charts at No. 1, not just in the United States, but in 22 other countries, as well, including her new adopted home, England. Selling 420,000 copies in the first week in the U.S. alone, Music was Madonna's first album to hit the top slot in 11 years — not bad for a 42-year-old mother of two.More about Madonna
A renaissance woman in the truest sense of the term - singer, composer, producer, actor, executive, humanitarian and, most recently mother - there is nothing, it seems, that Madonna can not do.
But it isn't simply her extraordinary list of achievements that has earned Madonna her status as one of a handful of the most innovative, influential and inspiring artists of our time. It is more her passionate commitment to excellence, her complete involvement in every essential aspect of her art, her career and her life, and a stubborn refusal to do anything less than all the way.
Those same qualities are brought to bear in both the movie and the music of Evita. The lavish screen version of Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber's classic musical, Evita, is a Cinergi/Robert Stigwood/Dirty Hands Production, produced by Robert Stigwood, Alan Parker and Andrew G. Vajna, directed by Alan Parker and released by Hollywood Pictures. EVITA - The Complete Motion Picture Music Soundtrack, released by Warner Bros. Records, features instantly definitive versions of the production's phenomenal score. Included is the brand new, fresh out-of-the-box smash single "You Must Love Me," written especially for the film by Webber and Rice, and in Madonna's hands, a suddenly indispensable addition to the well-known score. Simply put, Madonna has made Evita utterly and completely her own, and while there could never have been a doubt that she would give the performance of a lifetime, Madonna as Evita is, and will remain, a landmark in the career of an artist with a history of making history. It's a history written large, towering over the chronicles of popular culture and comprising a list of First, Best, Fastest and Longest that stands as a monument to one woman's exceptional ability and extraordinary ambition. From 1982, when a cocky, confident and coolly self-assured 24-year-old Detroit native first stepped on the stage to lip synch her debut single "Everybody," at New York's Danceteria, it was clear that something wholly original had landed in our midst.
That originality would go on to assert itself time and again, breaking every available radio, video, sales and box office record, and then going on to break more records, this time her own. Consider: since that auspicious debut fourteen years ago, Madonna has racked up no less than 19 Top 10 singles, eleven of those reaching No. 1, with her most recent chart-topper, 1994's "Take A Bow," lodged in the top spot for seven consecutive weeks and even besting the performance of her 1984 breakthrough "Like A Virgin" (which had a six-week run at No. 1). All told, Madonna's No. 1 and No. 2 singles have spent a total of forty weeks at the top of the charts - that's almost a solid year of uninterrupted hits. In one period in the late 80's, she racked up six straight Top 5 singles, neatly beating the Beatles old record for back-to-back chart-toppers, and it's a hit-making penchant that continues to this with the above mentioned "You Must Love Me" breaking out of the gate as one of the fastest-rising singles in Warner Bros. Records history.
But it hardly stops there - in fact, it doesn't even slow down to catch its breath. Of eleven Madonna albums, every one has reached Top 15, all but one has made it into the Top 10, and seven have attained Top 5 status. Of that eleven-album catalog (Evita will make it an even dozen), each one has sold over a million copies, two have sold over three million and five have sold over four million. Put it this way: best estimates have Madonna's international sales topping international sales topping 100 million units, which means one copy for every man, woman and child in New York City, Paris, London, Tokyo and Los Angeles, with a few left over for your home town.
Of course, as pivotal as recorded music is to the Incandescent One's unparalleled success, it only tells part of the story. Madonna has had more videos on MTV, and has had them played more often, than any other artist in that network's history. Set aside for a moment the mantel full of awards she has garnered for her groundbreaking contribution to the video art form: in a very real sense, the marriage of music and image that we know today is the work of this singular artist alone. After all, who came before her in recognizing the creative and commercial impact of the music video lexicon, and who has done more to expand its reach and maximize its impact?
As on the small screen, so too on the big, Madonna has established herself as an actor of real authenticity and risk-taking audacity, from her acting debut in Desperately Seeking Susan to her star turn in Dick Tracy, from her bravura documentary Truth Or Dare to her astonishing portrayal in Evita.
And, as on screen, so too on stage. Madonna's concerts are uniformly globe-stopping extravaganzas, bringing together music, theatrics, spectacle and sheer, dazzling charisma in events that have sold out stadiums around the world for almost two decades.
And who else has proven that glass ceilings are only there for the shattering, with her multi-media empire Maverick Entertainment, among a handful of the most successful start-up companies in entertainment history, thanks to the vision, guidance and guts of this quintessentially liberated woman?
But, of course, Madonna's place in history goes far beyond simple numbers, and far past statistics, no matter how impressive. It is, finally, her glorious music that matters to us most; her triumphant personal style that excites our admiration; her vision that inspires us, her courage that calls to us and her example that encourages us to dare and to dream.

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