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Cher Biography
Cherilyn Sarkisian La Pierre, 20 May 1946, El Centro, California, USA. Cher began working as a session singer in an attempt to finance an acting career. She recorded with producer Phil Spector as a backing vocalist, having become romantically attached to his studio assistant and PR man Sonny Bono. After releasing two singles under the name Caesar And Cleo, the duo then achieved international acclaim as Sonny And Cher. Throughout this period Cher also sustained a solo career, initially singing a paean to Ringo Starr ("Ringo I Love You") under the pseudonym Bonnie Jo Mason. Thereafter, she secured several hits, including an opportunistic cover version of the Byrds' "All I Really Want To Do" (US number 15, July 1965; UK number 9, August 1965). The sultry "Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)", with its gypsy beat and maudlin violins was a worldwide smash in March 1966 (US number 2; UK number 3), leading Cher to tackle more controversial themes in "I Feel Something In The Air" and "You Better Sit Down Kids" (US number 9, October 1967). Although her acting aspirations seemed long-forgotten, she did appear in two minor 60s movies, Good Times (1967) and Chastity (1969). In September 1971, the zestful, US chart-topping "Gypsies, Tramps And Thieves" and its attendant album saw her back in the ascendant. Two further US number 1 hits ("Half Breed" in August 1973, "Dark Lady" in January 1974) preceded her divorce from Sonny, though for a time the duo continued to appear together on stage and television. In 1975, she switched to Warner Brothers Records for the Jimmy Webb-produced Stars, while her on-off relationship with Gregg Allman (whom she divorced in 1979) resulted in one album, the punningly titled, Allman And Woman: Two The Hard Way. By the
late 70s, she became a regular fixture in gossip columns and fashion
magazines, which lauded over her sartorial outrageousness and much
publicized musical and personal relationships with Allman, Gene Simmons
(of Kiss) and Les Dudek. In 1981, Cher appeared on Meat Loaf's "Dead
Ringer For Love" but recording interests increasingly took a back
seat to her first love: acting. A leading role in Come Back To The Five
And Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean (1982) was followed by a lucrative part
in Silkwood (1983), and an Oscar nomination. Appearances in Mask (1985),
The Witches Of Eastwick (1987) and Suspect (1987) emphasized that her
thespian aspirations were no mere sideline. For Moonstruck (1987), she won
an Oscar for Best Actress and celebrated that honour with another musical
comeback courtesy of Cher and "I Found Someone" (US number 10,
November 1987; UK number 5, December 1987). In 1989, she enjoyed three US
Top 10 singles courtesy of "After All", a duet with Peter Cetera
that reached number 6 in March, "If I Could Turn Back Time"
(number 3 in July; UK number 6 in September) and "Just Like Jesse
James" (number 8 in October). Her April 1991 UK number 1 "The
Shoop Shoop Song (It's In His Kiss)", a cover of the Betty Everett
song, was the theme song to another screen appearance in Mermaids. Cher Links |
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