A star with staying power
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Madonna's
2001 "Drowned World" tour was her first in more than eight
years. |
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(CNN)
-- Since bursting onto the cultural landscape in the early 1980s, pop star
Madonna has taken on many incarnations. Through scandal, re-invention and
redemption, she has kept fans and critics alike intrigued for nearly 20
years.
"She is what I call a true star," said Nile Rodgers, a musician who has
worked as a producer for Madonna. "Even after all these years, I am still
curious what she eats for breakfast and that is because she is inherently
interesting."
"She certainly ranks among the top artists of the 20th century," said
Seymour Stein, who signed Madonna to her first record contract. "And I
think she's going to be one of the top artists of the 21st century."
Not content with merely playing the role of pop queen, Madonna also has
created sensations on television as an MTV pioneer, in publishing with her
infamous "Sex" book, in Hollywood as an actress and in the business world
as the mastermind of her phenomenally successful career.
Now the 43-year-old mother of two is once again in the spotlight with
her "Drowned World" tour, attracting a new generation of fans to her
sold-out performances.
Many have criticized Madonna as being more flash than substance. But
her defenders point to her long-running popularity and her seemingly
endless ability to stay one step ahead of the game.
"It's been 19 years. Come on, give the girl credit -- she's a star,"
Stein said.
Mother's death
Madonna Louise Veronica Ciccone was born August 16, 1958, to Madonna
and Silvio "Tony" Ciccone. Her mother was a housewife, and her father was
an automotive engineer. The family lived in a small brick house in
Pontiac, Michigan, a Detroit suburb.
"I won't say that we were poor," Madonna once told CNN's Larry King.
"But we were, I would say, lower-middle class."
One of six children, Madonna tried her best to stand out in her
boisterous Italian-Catholic family. As legend has it, she would dance and
sing on tabletops when the mood struck her.
Her mother died of cancer in 1963, a defining moment in Madonna's
childhood.
"This was before pain management became an important part of cancer
care," said J. Randy Taraborrelli, author of "Madonna: An Intimate
Biography."
"Many people know her mother died when she was 5 years old. But what
people don't know is how terrible that last year of Madonna's mother's
life was for Madonna. She felt really frustrated by the powerlessness that
went along with childhood," Taraborrelli said.
A few years after his wife's death, Tony Ciccone remarried, causing
tension in his relationship with his young daughter.
"It was really difficult for Madonna to accept the fact that her father
remarried," Taraborrelli said.
The family eventually moved to Rochester, Michigan. Madonna excelled
both in her studies and as a cheerleader at Rochester Adams High School.
"She worked really hard to be a dancer. She was willing to practice a
lot," recalled Karen Craven, who coached Madonna's cheerleading team.
Her mother's death may have fueled her drive.
"You walk around with a big hole inside you, a feeling of emptiness and
longing ... and I think a lot of times that's why you become an
overachiever," Madonna later said.
The hard work paid off when she received a dance scholarship to the
University of Michigan. But college wasn't enough for Madonna. She was in
a hurry to get on to bigger things.
New York dreamer
In 1978, she left the bucolic Midwest campus and landed in the heart of
New York's seedy Times Square. She picked up occasional modeling jobs and
stints with various professional dance troupes but had little more than
her dreams on which to survive.
"I danced in a lot of companies in New York for years and realized I
was going to be living a hand-to-mouth existence," Madonna recalled in an
interview with King.
Although she had come to New York with the goal of becoming a famous
dancer, it was her voice that finally got her noticed.
"People would hear me sing and they'd say, 'Hey, your voice isn't bad.'
And I'd say, 'Oh, really?' " Madonna recalled. "I mean, I never had any
training. I never wanted to be a singer."
In 1980, Madonna convinced an influential DJ to record a demo tape for
her, featuring a dance track called "Everybody."
The song caught the ear of Stein, then the president of Sire Records.
"She was singing with all her heart and that's what came across," Stein
recalled. "I was in the hospital and I had time on my hands, so I played
it over and over again and I really, really liked it. I wanted to sign her
immediately and, in fact, I asked her to come to the hospital."
Stein had high hopes for his young discovery and was anxious to make a
good impression despite his status as a patient.
"I had a barber come in and cut my hair," he said. "And I got pajamas
and a robe. I wanted to look my best. She couldn't have cared about that
at all. I could have been Sarah Bernhardt, you know, like lying in a
coffin, as long as my hand could reach out and I could sign a contract.
She was as anxious or more anxious than I was. She wanted a chance to
prove herself."
The Sire Records contract resulted in Madonna's first release.
"Everybody" was a huge hit on the club scene, and Madonna's music began to
gain attention.
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Madonna's
"boy toy" look circa 1984's "Lucky Star" inspired a generation
of "wannabe" fans.
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'She was different'
In 1983, she released her self-titled debut. Sales started off
sluggishly but picked up with the release of the hit single "Holiday."
The song's popularity netted the young singer an appearance on TV's
"American Bandstand," a teen music program with a history of launching
stars.
"I watched the kids and they loved her," said Dick Clark, the host of
"American Bandstand." "She had some sort of bizarre outfit on. She looked
different -- she was different -- and they loved her."
After the performance, Madonna told Clark that she wanted to "rule the
world." It soon became clear that hers was not an idle boast.
By 1984, her first album was certified platinum, spawning the hits
"Lucky Star" and "Borderline" in addition to "Holiday."
While she was recording a follow-up, a fashion craze developed among
teen-age Madonna fans who imitated their new idol by dressing in torn-up
clothes and rubber bracelets and tying rags in their hair. The Madonna
look sparked a trend of young "wannabe" fans.
Before the release of her second album, "Like a Virgin," Madonna made
an unforgettable appearance on the MTV Video Music Awards show, singing
the title track from the album while writhing around on the stage in a
wedding dress.
"It was the perfect blend of theatrics as well as this sort of
psychological warfare," Rodgers said.
Along with the title track, the album produced the hits "Material
Girl," "Angel" and "Dress You Up." It went platinum within a month.
Taking on Hollywood
Not content to be just a pop music star, Madonna tackled acting with a
critically acclaimed role in the 1985 movie "Desperately Seeking Susan."
Her link to Hollywood grew more intense when she met actor Sean Penn,
best known then for his role as a surfer dude in the 1982 movie "Fast
Times at Ridgemont High."
While Madonna craved the spotlight, Penn despised it. "She loved it,"
Taraborrelli said. "She worked very hard to get this type of attention.
Sean, on the other hand, felt like it was a real intrusion."
But love won out, and the couple wed on her 27th birthday in Malibu,
California, as journalists whirred overhead in helicopters.
Madonna's film career soon faltered when the bomb "Shanghai Surprise,"
co-starring her husband, hit the screens in 1986.
The marriage faltered as well. Madonna filed for divorce in early 1989.
"She wasn't used to failures," Taraborrelli said. "She had only been
used to successes up until that point. So it was a bitter pill to
swallow."
Although their relationship was rocky, Madonna still holds Penn in high
regard.
"He's an incredible human being," she said on "Larry King Live." "Even
though things didn't work out for us, I don't regret marrying him for a
minute."
Pushing the envelope
Madonna found refuge from the pain of her failed marriage by throwing
herself back into her work. In 1989, she unleashed a new album, "Like a
Prayer," which produced three No. 1 singles.
As in the earlier hit "Papa Don't Preach," which referred to teen
pregnancy and abortion, Madonna again inflamed religious groups with the
single "Like a Prayer." The song's video was filled with burning crosses
and sexual innuendo.
Madison Avenue was not amused. After signing the singer to a much
ballyhooed multimillion dollar deal, Pepsi yanked a commercial featuring
the song "Like a Prayer" after only one airing.
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Madonna
gets a chiropractic adjustment in "Truth or Dare," a 1991
documentary of the singer's "Blonde Ambition" tour. |
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In 1990, Madonna embarked on her "Blonde Ambition" tour. Her sexually
charged performances drew the ire of law enforcement officials.
The tour coincided with the release of her album "I'm Breathless,"
which featured music from her star turn in the 1990 movie "Dick Tracy."
It was a good year for Madonna. Not only was she invited to perform
music from "Dick Tracy" for the Oscar ceremony, she walked down the red
carpet with Michael Jackson on her arm.
But Madonna was just getting warmed up. Her next move was to make the
video "Justify My Love," which was so racy that even MTV refused to air it
without cuts. Madonna, however, refused to edit it. After the controversy
whipped up a frenzy of publicity, the star released the unedited video
into stores across the country.
She topped that scandal with the publication of a book titled simply
"Sex." The intensely graphic book was a collection of photos revealing
Madonna's sexual fantasies. Even her staunchest fans were shocked.
"These were the years when she was trying to make a statement that
there is nothing wrong with sexuality," Taraborrelli said. "But she was at
the same time pushing it right down people's throats, and a lot of people
were offended by a lot of the things she was doing at the time."
From Material Girl to mom
In 1994, Madonna released the album "Bedtime Stories," which included
her biggest hit to date. The romantic ballad "Take a Bow," No. 1 for nine
weeks, revealed a vulnerable side of Madonna that had been obscured by her
previous "sexcapades." It marked the beginning of another transformation.
She returned to movies to portray Eva Peron, the 1940s Argentine first
lady, in a lavish musical. Madonna had lobbied for years to land the
starring role in "Evita." She felt a special kinship with the real-life
character, whose love of fame and ability to generate controversy mirrored
Madonna's life in some respects.
"It was really important to her to help and stand up for the rights of
people, and I also feel that," Madonna said in an interview.
While filming, Madonna learned that she was pregnant, and on October
14, 1996, she gave birth to a daughter, Lourdes. Madonna never married the
father, Carlos Leon, who was her personal trainer.
"I love looking into her eyes," Madonna said of Lourdes. "I love
watching her grow. I love watching her absorb life around her."
Madonna's performance in "Evita" garnered her a Golden Globe for best
actress in a musical or comedy.
The awards kept coming. In 1998, she released "Ray of Light," with
lyrics and musical styles embodying a newfound maturity. Madonna won three
Grammys for the album. She grabbed another Grammy the following year for
her song "Beautiful Stranger," which was featured on the "Austin Powers:
The Spy Who Shagged Me" soundtrack.
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At 43, the
pop star has managed to stay contemporary with hits like
"Music." |
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Motherhood agreed with Madonna, and she eventually announced she was
pregnant again, this time with British film director Guy Ritchie. Rocco
Ritchie was born August 11, 2000, just as the title track of her album
"Music" was taking off on the charts.
At the end of 2000, Madonna married Guy Ritchie in a private ceremony
in Scotland. But marriage did not mean the diva was settling down.
In 2001, Madonna launched her first world tour in more than eight
years. The "Drowned World Tour" kicked off in Barcelona, Spain, and
quickly became the summer's hottest ticket, with scalpers getting up to
$3,000 per seat.
Most who know her think that Madonna is years away from her swan song
and that she still has a few tricks up her sleeve.
"If you look back at all the female superstars who have come and gone
in the span of her career, it is just not safe to bet against her," Stein
said.
And how does Madonna feel about her long journey?
"I wouldn't trade my life for anyone's," she said.