Born  Madonna Louise Ciccone, 16 August 1958,  Bay City, Michigan, USA. An  icon for female pop stars thanks to her  proven ability to reinvent  herself while retaining complete control of  her career, Madonna is also  one of the most commercially successful  artists in the history of  popular music. 
Without doubt an artist with  "star quality", no other  female singer in the pop arena has been as  prominent or as successful  over such a long period.The young Madonna  Louise Ciccone excelled at  dance and drama at high school and during  brief periods at colleges in  Michigan and North Carolina. In 1977, she  went to New York, studying  with noted choreographer Alvin Ailey and  taking modelling jobs. Two  years later, Madonna moved to France to join  a show featuring disco  singer Patrick Hernandez. 
There she met Dan  Gilroy and, back in New  York, the pair formed club band the Breakfast  Club. Madonna played  drums and sang with the band before setting up  Emmy in 1980 with  Detroit-born drummer and former boyfriend, Steve  Bray. Together,  Madonna and Bray created club tracks which led to a  recording deal with  Sire Records. With leading New York disc jockey  Mark Kamins producing,  she recorded "Everybody", a US club hit in 1982.  Madonna broke out from  the disco scene into mainstream pop with  "Holiday", written and  produced by Jellybean. It reached the US Top 20  in late 1983 and was a  Top 10 hit across Europe the following year.
By  now, her tough, raunchy persona was coming across to  international  audiences and the attitude was underlined by the choice  of Tom Kelly  and Billy Steinberg's catchy "Like A Virgin" as a 1984  single. The  track provided the singer with the first of her subsequent  11 US number  1s. 
The follow-up, "Material Girl", included a promotional  video which  introduced one of Madonna's most characteristic visual  styles, the  mimicking of Marilyn Monroe's "blonde bombshell' image. By  the time of  her appearance at 1985"s Live Aid concert and her  high-profile wedding  to actor Sean Penn on 16 August the same year,  Madonna had become an  internationally recognized superstar, known to  millions of tabloid  newspaper readers without any interest in her  music. Among the fans of  her work were a growing number of "wannabees",  teenage girls who aped  her independent and don't-care stance.From   1985-87, Madonna turned out a stream of irresistibly catchy   transatlantic Top 5 singles. "Crazy For You", her second US   chart-topper, was co-written by ex-Carpenters collaborator John Bettis,   while she co-wrote her first UK number 1, "Into The Groove", with Steve   Bray. These were followed by "Dress You Up", "Live To Tell", and the   transatlantic chart-topper, "Papa Don't Preach". "True Blue", "Open   Your Heart" and "La Isla Bonita' were further successes taken from   1986"s True Blue. Like an increasing number of her songs, "Who's That   Girl" (her second transatlantic number 1) and "Causing A Commotion"   were tied-in to a movie - in this instance, a poorly received comedy in   which she starred with Sir John Mills. Madonna's film career had begun   with a minor role in the b-movie A Certain Sacrifice before she starred   in the acclaimed Desperately Seeking Susan. The following year she   appeared with husband Penn in her first real failure, Shanghai   Surprise. She separated from Penn in 1988, the same year she appeared   on Broadway in David Mamet's play Speed The Plow. Back on the music   scene, the singer continued to attract controversy when, in 1989, the   video for "Like A Prayer" (her third transatlantic chart-topper), with   its links between religion and eroticism, was condemned by the Vatican   and caused Pepsi-Cola to cancel a sponsorship deal with the star. The   resulting publicity helped the album of the same title - co-produced   with new collaborator Patrick Leonard - to become a global bestseller.In   1990, her career reached a new peak of publicity and commercial   success. She starred with Warren Beatty in the blockbuster movie Dick   Tracy, while the extravagant costumes and choreography of the Blond   Ambition world tour were the apotheosis of Madonna's uninhibited   melange of sexuality, song, dance and religiosity. The tour was   commemorated by the following year's documentary movie, Truth Or Dare.   Among her hits of the early 90s were the transatlantic number 1   "Vogue", devoted to a short-lived dance craze, "Hanky Panky", "Justify   My Love" (co-written with Lenny Kravitz), "Rescue Me", and "This Used   To Be My Playground" (from the soundtrack of A League Of Their Own).
Madonna's  reputation as a strong businesswoman, in control of  each aspect of her  career, was confirmed in 1992 when she signed a  multi-million dollar  deal with the Time-Warner conglomerate, parent  company of Sire. This  guaranteed the release of albums, films and books  created by her own  Maverick production company. The publication of her  graphic and erotic  book 
Sex put her back on top of the charts, though  this time it was in  the bestselling book lists. The book was an  unprecedented success,  selling out within hours and needing an  immediate reprint. The  attendant Erotica marked a slight creative  downturn, and was her first  album since her debut not to generate a US  number 1 single. She  returned to form on Bedtime Stories, on which she  teamed up with Soul  II Soul producer Nellee Hooper, who wrote the title  track in  conjunction with Björk. "Take A Bow" returned the singer to  the top of  the US singles chart, while the rest of the album boasted  songs that  combined, by her own description, pop, R&B, hip-hop and  Madonna.  The 1995 compilation of her slower material, Something To  Remember,  featured the excellent new song, "You'll See".In  1996,  Madonna's need to shock had mellowed considerably with a credible  movie  portrayal of Eva Peron in Alan Parker's Evita. Later that year  she  became "with child' on 14 October with the birth of Lourdes Maria   Ciccone Leon. She returned to music with March 1998"s Ray Of Light, one   of her finest recordings to date. Collaborating with producer William   Orbit, Madonna positively revelled in a new found musical freedom. Her   voice had also matured into a rich and expressive instrument. The album   generated several transatlantic hit singles, including "Frozen" (a UK   chart-topper), "Ray Of Light", "Drowned World (Substitute For Love)",   "The Power Of Good-bye", and "Nothing Really Matters". "Beautiful   Stranger', taken from the soundtrack to the Mike Myers" movie Austin   Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me, reached number 2 in the UK charts in   June 1999. 
Another soundtrack, for the movie The Next Best Thing,   co-written and co-produced by Madonna and Orbit, was released on the   singer's Maverick label. It featured her new single, a reworking of Don   McLean's classic "American Pie".Madonna  worked with Orbit and French  dance producer Mirwais on her next  collection, Music, the title track  of which was a transatlantic  chart-topper in September 2000. Shortly  before the release of the  album, on 11 August, the singer gave birth to  her second child, Rocco.  On 22 December, she married the UK film  director Guy Ritchie in  Scotland and managed once again to grab most of  the newspaper  headlines. She went on to collaborate with Ritchie on  the controversial  video for "What It Feels Like For A Girl", and in  2002 starred in the  director's ill-fated remake of Swept Away. The same  year Madonna  performed the theme song to the new James Bond movie, Die  Another Day.  The following year she released her new studio album,  American Life, a  transatlantic chart-topper. www.topsexywomen.com
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Thursday, February 10, 2011
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