Diana Ross
(born Diana Ernestine Earle Ross
; March 26, 1944) is an American singer and actress. During the 1960s, she helped shape the Motown Sound as lead singer of The Supremes, before leaving the group for a solo career on January 15, 1970. Since the beginning of her career with The Supremes and as a solo artist, Ross has sold more than 53 million albums. [1]
During the 1970s and through the mid 1980s, Ross was among the most successful female artists, crossing over into film, television and Broadway. She received a Best Actress Academy Award nomination for her 1972 role as Billie Holiday in Lady Sings the Blues
. She won a Golden Globe award for Lady Sings the Blues
. She won American Music Awards, garnered twelve Grammy Award nominations, and won a Tony Award for her one-woman show, An Evening with Diana Ross
, in 1977.
In 1976, Billboard
magazine named her the "Female Entertainer of the Century." In 1993, the Guinness Book Of World Records
declared Diana Ross the most successful female music artist in history with a total of eighteen American number-one singles: twelve as lead singer of The Supremes and six as a soloist. Ross was the first female solo artist to score six number-ones. This feat puts her in a tie for fifth place among solo female artists with the most No. 1s on the Hot 100. [2] She is also one of the few recording artists to have two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame--one as a solo artist and the other as a member of The Supremes. In December 2007, she received a John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts Honors Award.
Including her work with The Supremes, Ross has recorded 61 studio albums. Ross is a lyric soprano.
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DIANA ROSS TICKETS
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Early life and career
Diana Ross, the daughter of a former
United States Army soldier from
Bluefield, West Virginia and a
schoolteacher from
Bessemer, Alabama, was born at
Hutzel Women's Hospital [3], in
Detroit, Michigan. Her parents intended to name her Diane, but a clerical error on her birth certificate recorded her as "Diana" Ross. After living on Detroit's
North End, Ross's family settled at the
Brewster-Douglass housing projects. Ross aspired to be a
fashion designer, and studied design and seamstress skills while attending
Cass Technical High School in Midtown Detroit.
In 1959, Ross was brought to the attention of Milton Jenkins, the manager of the local
doo-wop group The Primes, by friend
Mary Wilson. Reportedly, Primes member
Paul Williams convinced Jenkins to enlist Ross in the sister group The Primettes, which included Wilson,
Florence Ballard and
Betty McGlown. Ross, Wilson and Ballard each sang lead during live performances and in 1960, the group signed with
Lupine Records where the label issued the Ross-led single "
Tears of Sorrow" b/w the Wilson-led "
Pretty Baby".
The Supremes (1959–1970)
In 1961, having already replaced McGlown with
Barbara Martin, the quartet auditioned for and eventually signed with
Motown Records under their new moniker,
The Supremes
.
Following Martin's exit in 1962, the group remained a trio. In 1963, Motown CEO
Berry Gordy made Ross the lead singer of the group, as he felt the group could "cross over" to the pop charts with Ross's vocal quality. After The Supremes hit number one with "
Where Did Our Love Go", the group found unprecedented success: between August 1964 and May 1967, Ross, Wilson and Ballard sang on ten
number-one hit singles, all of which also made the UK Top 40.
After deciding to remove Florence Ballard from the group in July 1967, Gordy chose
Cindy Birdsong, a member of
Patti LaBelle and the Bluebelles, as her replacement. Shortly thereafter, he changed the group's name to
Diana Ross and the Supremes
to build name recognition prior to the planned future departure of Ross as a solo performer. Previously, Berry Gordy had changed the names of both
Smokey Robinson & The Miracles (The Miracles) and
Martha Reeves & The Vandellas (The Vels) for similar reasons.
Recording a total of 12 number-one singles, The Supremes became the most successful American vocal group of the 1960s, and, after
The Beatles, the second most successful group worldwide.
Leaving the Supremes
Motown initially conceived of a solo career for Ross 1966, but, did not act on this until 1968. Television specials such as
TCB
(1968) and
G.I.T. on Broadway
(1969) were designed to spotlight Diana Ross as a star in her own right, and much of the later Ross-led Supremes material was recorded by Ross with session singers
The Andantes, not Wilson and Birdsong, on backing vocals.
By the summer of 1969, Ross began her first solo recordings. In November of the same year, three years after it was first rumored,
Billboard
magazine confirmed Ross's departure from the group to begin her solo career. That same year, Ross introduced Motown's newest act,
The Jackson 5, to national audiences at the
Hollywood Palace.
Ross began her solo sessions with a number of producers, including Bones Howe and
Johnny Bristol. Her first track with Bristol, "
Someday We'll Be Together", was tagged as a potential solo single, but it instead was issued as the final Diana Ross & the Supremes release. "Someday We'll Be Together" was the 12th and the final number-one hit for the Supremes and the last American number-one hit of the 1960s. Ross made her final appearance with the Supremes at the
Frontier Hotel in
Las Vegas on January 14, 1970.
Early solo career
After a half-year of recording material with various producers, Ross settled with the production team of
Nickolas Ashford and Valerie Simpson, the creative force behind
Marvin Gaye &
Tammi Terrell's hit duets. Ashford and Simpson helmed most of Ross's first album,
Diana Ross
, and continued to write and produce for her for the next decade.
In May 1970,
Diana Ross
was released on Motown. The first single, the
gospel-influenced "
Reach Out and Touch (Somebody's Hand)", peaked at #20 on the Billboard Hot 100. The album's second single, a fully rearranged cover of Gaye and Terrell's 1967 hit, and another Ashford & Simpson composition, "
Ain't No Mountain High Enough", was an international hit, and gave Ross her first #1 pop single and gold record award as a solo artist. "Ain't No Mountain High Enough" received a
Grammy nomination for Best Pop Vocal Performance, Female.
In 1971, Motown released Ross's second album
Everything Is Everything
, which produced Ross's first UK number one solo single, "
I'm Still Waiting". Several months later, Ross released
Surrender
, which included the top 20 pop hit, "Remember Me". That year, she hosted her first solo TV special,
Diana!
, featuring guest appearances by
The Jackson 5,
Bill Cosby and
Danny Thomas.
By then, Motown Records had relocated to Hollywood. Berry Gordy decided it was time the company ventured again into new territory, so he focused much of his attention on developing a
motion picture company and making Ross a movie star.
Lady Sings the Blues
In late 1971, Motown announced that Diana Ross was going to portray
jazz icon
Billie Holiday in a Motown-produced biographical film loosely based on Holiday's autobiography
Lady Sings the Blues
(1956) written by Holiday and
William Dufty. Immediately, critics ridiculed Ross's casting in the role. Ross and Holiday were considered to be "miles apart" in vocal styling and appearance. Undaunted, Ross immersed herself in Holiday's music and life story. Ross actually knew little about Holiday and wasn't a big fan of jazz in general. Instead of imitating Holiday's voice, Ross focused on Holiday's vocal phrasing.
Opening in October 1972,
Lady Sings the Blues
was a phenomenal success, and Ross's performance drew universal favorable reviews. The movie co-starred
Brian's Song
star
Billy Dee Williams, who played Holiday's lover, Louis McKay. The cast also included
comedian Richard Pryor, who played the "Piano Man". In 1973, Ross was nominated for both the
Golden Globe Award and the
Academy Award for "Best Actress". Winning a Golden Globe for Best Newcomer, Ross lost the Best Actress Oscar to her friend
Liza Minnelli for her role in
Cabaret
. The soundtrack album for
Lady Sings the Blues
reached number one on the
Billboard 200 for two weeks and sold 300,000 copies during its first eight days of release. Reportedly, after several of the soundtrack's recording sessions, many of the musicians (some of whom played with Billie Holiday) spontaneously erupted into applause, in praise of Ross's performances. The double-pocket custom label record is Diana's third best-selling album of all time, behind the 1980 Motown release "Diana", and 1976's "Diana Ross".
In 1972, shortly after filming
Lady Sings the Blues
, Ross recorded an all-jazz album titled
Blue
, which was shelved by Motown Records staff, who wanted Ross to return to pop music. The following year, Ross responded with
Touch Me in the Morning
. The
title track became Ross's second US number-one hit. Later in 1973, Ross and label mate
Marvin Gaye released their successful duets album,
Diana & Marvin
, which included the top-twenty US hit, "
My Mistake (Was to Love You)" and the top-five UK hit cover of
The Stylistics' "
You Are Everything".
In 1975, Ross again co-starred with Billy Dee Williams in the Motown film
Mahogany
. The story of an aspiring fashion designer who becomes a runway model and the toast of the industry,
Mahogany
was a troubled production from its inception. The film's original director,
Tony Richardson, was fired during production and Berry Gordy assumed the director's chair himself. In addition, Gordy and Ross clashed during filming, with Ross leaving the production before shooting was completed, forcing Gordy to use secretary Edna Anderson as a body double for Ross. While a box office success, the film was not well received by the critics:
Time
magazine's review of the film chastised Gordy for "squandering one of America's most natural resources: Diana Ross".
[4]
Ross hit number-one on the pop charts twice in 1976 with "
Theme From Mahogany
(Do You Know Where You're Going To)", and the
disco single "
Love Hangover". A third single release, "I Thought It Took A Little Time", also was a sizable hit from that album. The success of these singles made her 1976 album,
Diana Ross
, her fourth LP to reach the Top 10. In 1977, her Broadway one-woman show earned her a special
Tony Award. That same show was televised as a special on
NBC and later released as
An Evening with Diana Ross
.
That same year, Motown acquired the film rights to the popular Broadway play
The Wiz
, an African-American reinterpretation of
L. Frank Baum's
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
. Although teenage
Stephanie Mills, a veteran of the play, was originally cast as Dorothy, Diana Ross convinced
Universal Pictures producer
Rob Cohen to have Ross cast as Dorothy. As a result, the eleven-year old protagonist of the story became a shy twenty-four year old schoolteacher from
Harlem, New York. Among Ross' costars in the film were
Lena Horne,
Richard Pryor,
Nipsey Russell,
Ted Ross (no relation), and her former label mate and protégé
Michael Jackson from the
Jackson 5. Upon its October 1978 release, the
film adaptation of The Wiz
was a costly commercial and critical failure, and was Ross's final film for Motown. The accompanying
Quincy Jones produced soundtrack album, however, sold over 850,000 copies. However, since its initial release, the film has become a cult classic and, in 2008, was re-released in an Anniversary Edition DVD set.
In 1979, Ross reunited with Nicholas Ashford & Valerie Simpson for the album
The Boss
, which became Ross's first recognized
gold-certified album (Motown sales records before 1977 were not audited by the
RIAA, and therefore none of Motown's pre-1977 releases was awarded certification). That album became Diana Ross' best-selling album since her disco success four years earlier, and set the stage for her biggest-selling Motown album of all time. It was no mistake that the writing team of Ashford & Simpson was brought in, as they were a top-selling disco act themselves during this period, having had three gold-selling albums in a row to their credit. Two massive disco hits, "The Boss" and "No One Gets The Prize", and lesser-known but as important single, "It's My House" made the 1979 release a quick gold seller. In 1980, Ross released her first RIAA platinum-certified disc, "
diana", produced by
Chic's front men
Nile Rodgers and
Bernard Edwards. The album included two of Ross's most successful solo hits, her fifth number-one single, "
Upside Down", and the Top 5 single "
I'm Coming Out".
diana
was the singer's most successful studio album to date, peaking at number two on the
Billboard 200 chart for three weeks and selling over 6 million copies in the United States.
Ross scored a Top 10 hit in late 1980 with the theme song to the 1980 film
It's My Turn
. The following year, she collaborated with former
Commodores singer-songwriter
Lionel Richie on the theme song for the film
Endless Love
. The
Academy Award-nominated "
Endless Love" single became her final hit on Motown Records, and the Number One Record of the year. Feeling that Motown, and in particular Gordy, were keeping her from freely expressing herself and not according her financial parity, Ross left Motown, signing a $20 million contract with
RCA Records in the US and Canada and
Capitol/EMI elsewhere, ending her twenty-year tenure with the label. At the time, the Ross-RCA deal was the most money ever paid to a recording artist. When the duet with Lionel Richie "Endless Love" hit number one in 1981, Ross became the first female artist in music history to have six singles at number one on the
Billboard Hot 100. That single, the last of her Motown career up to that time, was her first (and to date, only) platinum single, selling in excess of two million copies.
1980s and 1990s
Diana Ross's
RCA Records debut,
Why Do Fools Fall in Love
, was issued in the summer of 1981. The album yielded 3 Top 10 hits including the title track "
Why Do Fools Fall in Love", a remake of the 1956
Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers classic of the same name, and the single "
Mirror Mirror". A third single, "Work That Body", hit the top ten in the UK.
In 1983, Ross reunited with former
Supremes Mary Wilson and
Cindy Birdsong for the television special
Motown 25: Yesterday, Today, Forever
. The three performed their 1969 number-one hit "
Someday We'll Be Together", although alleged onstage altercations between Ross and Wilson became an issue during and after the taping of the special. A four-song Supremes set was planned but Ross, suffering from the flu, declined to rehearse with "The Girls" and stated that they would have to be happy just doing "Someday We'll Be Together". Before the special was filmed later that evening, Wilson allegedly planned with Birdsong to take a step forward every time Ross did the same. This frustrated Ross, causing her to push Wilson's shoulder. Later, Wilson was not aware of the script set by producer Suzanne DePasse, in which Ross was to introduce Berry Gordy. Wilson took it upon herself to do so,
[5] at which point Ross pushed down Wilson's hand-held microphone, stating "It's been taken care of." Ross, then, introduced Gordy.
[6] These incidents were excised from the final edit of the taped special, but still made their way into the news media;
People
magazine reported that "Ross [did] some elbowing to get Wilson out of the spotlight."
[7]
Later that year, Ross held a concert in
Central Park, the proceeds of which were to go towards building a playground in the singer's name. Fifteen minutes into the concert, which was being filmed for
Showtime cable television and televised worldwide, a torrential downpour began. As she urged the crowd of over 800,000 to safely exit the venue, Ross announced that she would continue the performance the next day. Her actions drew praise from the mainstream press. That next day, over 500,000 people came back for one of the largest free concerts in the park's history. However, the second show generated controversy. During and after the concert, groups of young men began a rampage through Central Park, assaulting and robbing more than one hundred people. Some of the victims of the attacks subsequently filed law suits against New York City for failing to provide adequate security at the concert. The suits were eventually settled at a cost of millions of dollars. The funds for the playground were to be derived from sales of different items at the concert, however, any and all profits earned from the first concert were spent on the second. When the mainstream media discovered the exorbitant costs of the two concerts, Diana Ross faced criticism and poor publicity. Although representatives of Diana Ross originally refused to pay anything for the proposed playground, citing a lack of revenue from the concert, the
Diana Ross Playground was finally built three years later, with Ross personally paying the $250,000 costs.
[8]
Other hit singles recorded by Ross for RCA included the Grammy nominated "
Muscles" (1982), "So Close" (1983), "Pieces of Ice" (1983), "All of You" (1984), the no. 1 dance hit "
Swept Away" (1984), the no. 1 R&B Marvin Gaye tribute "
Missing You" (1985), "
Eaten Alive" (1985) and the UK number-one single, "
Chain Reaction" (1986). Ross also sang on the 1985 worldwide #1 "
We Are The World". Albums during this period included the
gold-certified releases,
All The Great Hits
,
Silk Electric
,
Diana Ross Anthology
and
Swept Away
, the latter being the last top forty charted album in Ross' career for two decades. While Ross continued to have success overseas as the 1980s continued, she began to struggle on the United States
Billboard Hot 100 chart. The 1987 album
Red Hot Rhythm & Blues
was a critical but less commercial success and "
If We Hold On Together", the theme to the
Don Bluth animated film "
The Land Before Time" in 1988 was a # 1 single in Japan, later making the UK Top 20 in 1992. In 1989, after leaving RCA, Diana Ross returned to Motown, where she was now both a part-owner and a recording artist.
In 1989, Diana Ross released her first Motown album in eight years, the Nile Rodgers-produced
Workin' Overtime
. Despite a Number 3 R&B hit with the title track, the album failed to find a pop audience in America, as Ross's 1987 RCA release had. Subsequent follow-up albums such as 1991's
The Force Behind the Power
, 1995's
Take Me Higher
and 1999's
Every Day is a New Day
produced the same disappointing results in the US. Her last major R&B hit single was "No Matter What You Do", a duet with
Al B. Sure!, which peaked at #4 in early 1991.
Ross had success with her latter-day Motown albums and singles in the United Kingdom and Europe, however, scoring Top 10 UK hits with "
When You Tell Me That You Love Me" (1991), "One Shining Moment" (1992), and "
Not Over You Yet" (1999). Additionally, "Force Behind The Power", "Heart (Don't Change My Mind)" (1992), "Your Love" (1994), "The Best Years of My Life" (1994), "Take Me Higher" (1995), "Gone" (1995), "I Will Survive" (1996) and "In the Ones You Love" (1996) all reached either the UK Top 20 or Top 40, proving that while her domestic chart performance waned, she was still a viable recording artist internationally. Ross headlined the 1991 UK Royal Variety Performance and was a halftime performer at
Super Bowl XXX in 1996. She also performed in London, England in 1995, delivering an outstanding set at Wembley Stadium as the pre-game attraction in the opening game of the Rugby League world cup between Great Britain and Australia. Having announced to the capacity crowd that "I love the game of Rugby League", Ross is known to be a major fan of the game, with a particular fondness for the Yorkshire team Batley. In 1999, she was named the most successful female singer in the history of the United Kingdom charts, based upon a tally of her career hits. Fellow Michigan singer
Madonna would eventually succeed Ross as the most successful female artist in the UK.
Diana Ross returned to acting in the
ABC telefilm,
Out of Darkness
(1994), in which she played a woman suffering from schizophrenia. Ross drew critical acclaim for her acting, and scored her third
Golden Globe nomination. In 1999, Ross co-starred with young
R&B singer
Brandy for the ABC television movie
Double Platinum
playing a singer who neglected her daughter while concentrating on her career.
1999-2003
Diana Ross was a presenter at the
1999 MTV Video Music Awards, held that September. She shocked TV viewers when she touched
rapper Lil' Kim's exposed, pasty-covered breast, reportedly amazed at the young rapper's brashness.
[9] A month after the
Lil Kim incident, authorities at London's
Heathrow Airport detained Ross for assaulting a female security guard. The singer claimed that she had felt "violated as a woman" by the body search that she was subjected to. In retaliation, she was alleged to have fondled the bust of the female airport security guard. The singer was detained but later released.
[10]
In 2000, Ross announced a
Supremes reunion tour, again with former group-mates Mary Wilson and Cindy Birdsong, entitled
Return to Love
. Wilson and Birdsong declined the tour because of a reported difference in pay offered to each member: as performer and producer, Ross was offered $15 million while Wilson was offered $2 million (later increased to $3 million by Ross herself) and Birdsong, $1 million.
[11] They were replaced by latter-day Supremes
Lynda Laurence and
Scherrie Payne, both of whom were members of the group after Diana Ross's departure. Despite a respectable opening in Philadelphia and sold-out performance at
Madison Square Garden in
New York (ironically, the final show they would play), the
Return to Love
tour was canceled after nine dates because of slow ticket sales, most of which cost double, and in some cases, triple what is charged for Diana Ross (as a solo performer) tickets.
In December 2002, Ross was arrested in
Tucson, Arizona for
drunk driving. She pleaded "no contest", and later served a two-day jail sentence near her home in
Greenwich, Connecticut.
[12] Following the arrest and jail sentence, Ross stayed out of the public eye during much of the following year, and would not return to touring again until 2004.
Current work
|Kennedy Center names 2007 honors recipients}}
}}
Following successful European and American tours in 2004, Diana Ross returned to the Billboard music charts with a two duets in 2005. "I've Got a Crush on You", recorded with
Rod Stewart for his album
The Great American Songbook
, reached #19 on the Billboard Hot Adult Contemporary chart. The second, recorded with
Westlife, was a remake of Ross' 1991 #2 UK single, "When You Tell Me You Love Me", and reached #2 in the UK, just as the original had, and #1 in Ireland.
In June 2006, Motown released the shelved
Blue
album, which peaked at #2 on Billboard's Jazz Albums chart. Ross' new studio album,
I Love You
, was released worldwide on October 2, 2006 and January 16, 2007, in North America, on the
Manhattan Records/
EMI label.
[13] The new album earned the coveted
Hot Shot Debut
by
Billboard magazine when it debuted at #32 on Billboard's Hot100 pop albums chart and #16 on its R&B chart, making it Ross's first top forty US pop album since 1984's
Swept Away
. Since its release in 2007,
EMI Inside reports that
I Love You
has sold more than 622,000 copies world-wide.
thumb honorees as she is recognized for her career achievements by then-President
George W. Bush in the
East Room of the
White House Sunday, Dec. 2, 2007, during the Kennedy Center Gala Reception. From left are singer-songwriter
Brian Wilson; filmmaker
Martin Scorsese; comedian, actor and author
Steve Martin and pianist
Leon Fleisher.
In January 2007, Ross appeared on a number of TV shows across the U.S. to promote her new album and began touring in the spring. She appeared on
American Idol
as a mentor to the contestants
[14] Ross's United States "I Love You" tour garnered positive reviews,
[15] as did her European tour of the same year.
[16]
At the 2007
BET Awards, Ross was presented with a Lifetime Achievement Award by singer
Alicia Keys and her five children.
Stevie Wonder,
Erykah Badu and
Chaka Khan performed a tribute to Ross, covering several of her hits. During her acceptance speech, she lambasted the declining level of professional standards among the current generation's musicians, as well as their over-abundant use of vulgarity and profanity to garner press attention and record sales. Later that year, the prestigious
Kennedy Center Honors committee, which recognizes career excellence, cultural influence and contributions to American culture, named Diana Ross as one of its honorees. Past honoree and fellow Motown alumni
Smokey Robinson and actor
Terence Howard spoke on her behalf at the official ceremony that December, and singers
Ciara,
Vanessa L. Williams,
Yolanda Adams and
American Idol
winner
Jordin Sparks performed musical tributes.
In February 2008, Diana Ross was guest speaker at the Houston-based Brilliant Lecture series, at The Hobby Center, Houston. The lectures are designed to present prolific and influential characters to speak about their life and inspirations. During her lecture Ross stated that it is "unlikely" that she would undertake any further movie projects.
In May 2008, Diana headlined at New York's Radio City Music Hall at the 'Divas with Heart' event, which also featured fellow R&B legends
Gladys Knight,
Chaka Khan and
Patti LaBelle. The following month she was a headliner at the City Stages music festival in Birmingham, AL, next to The Flaming Lips. The New York Times said about the duo, "the most incongruous headliners at an outdoor urban concert series, with the once-in-a-lifetime-at-most combination of Diana Ross and the Flaming Lips. Something for everyone, surely." She performed at two major events in the UK in July 2008: the famous Liverpool Pops Festival and the National Trust Summer Festival at Petworth House, West Sussex.
Diana's 1970 album
Everything Is Everything
was released in the United States for the first time on
CD on April 18, 2008, as an expanded edition with bonus tracks and alternate versions of the songs. On December 9, 2008, the expanded edition of her third solo album,
Surrender
, was released.
In early December 2008, Motown announced the result of an international poll of the greatest Motown recordings. The winner, worldwide, was
Marvin Gaye's "
I Heard it Through the Grapevine" while Ross' version of "
Ain't No Mountain High Enough" was No. 2. This track was the top choice by British voters. The poll determined the track listing for a Motown fiftieth anniversary album to be released in December. A significant number of Supremes and Diana Ross songs finished in the top 50 of the poll, requiring the elimination of some of these songs from the final track listing to prevent an unbalanced track selection.
On October 16-18, 2009, Diana Ross is scheduled to headline the annual Dutch concert event, "Symphonica in Rosso", in the 29,000-seat Gelredome Stadium, in Arnhem, The Netherlands. She is to be accompanied by a 40-piece orchestra.
Personal life
Diana was the second of six children born to a
Baptist family by Fred Ross (July 4, 1920 - November 21, 2007) and Ernestine Ross (January 27, 1916 - October 9, 1984) in
Detroit's
Brewster-Douglass Housing Projects. During Diana's later teenage years, her parents divorced. Diana's mother later married John Jordan but Fred Ross never remarried. Her older sister Barbara became a doctor, while her younger sister Rita became a teacher. Brothers
Arthur and Chico Ross followed their sister in the recording industry and entertainment business respectively.
Before she became a successful singer and performer, "Diana" was known to all as "Diane Ross". She attended Detroit's
Cass Technical High School, graduating in January 1962 at the age of seventeen, one semester before the rest of her classmates.
Diana is the mother of five children. Ross married music business manager Robert Ellis Silberstein in January 1971. Daughter Rhonda Suzanne Silberstein was born on August 8, 1971. Many years later it was revealed that Rhonda's biological father is
Berry Gordy. She is now known as
Rhonda Ross Kendrick. Ross and Silberstein had two daughters: Tracee Joy Silberstein, born October 29, 1972, now known as
Tracee Ellis Ross and Chutney Lane Silberstein, born November 4, 1975, now known as Chudney Ross. Ross and Robert Silberstein divorced in March 1977.
In February, 1986, she married
Norwegian shipping magnate
Arne Næss Jr.. Their sons are Ross Arne Næss (born
October 7,
1987) and Evan Olav Næss (born
August 26,
1988), now known as
Evan Ross. Ross and Næss divorced in 1999. Næss was killed in a mountain-climbing accident in 2004.
Rhonda and Tracee graduated from
Brown University, and Chutney from
Georgetown University. All followed their mother to show business. Rhonda gained success as an actress in television movies and daytime soap and Tracee was a co-star of the hit sitcom
Girlfriends
. Chudney is active in behind-the-scenes work and is also a model. Son Ross currently attends New York's
Marist College where he is a ski club member
[17], and has not followed his siblings into show business. Youngest son Evan opted to pursue an acting career rather than attend college.
Diana’s brother,
Arthur "T-Boy" Ross, was a songwriter for Motown; he co-wrote, “
I Want You”, which was recorded by Marvin Gaye. Arthur and his wife, Patricia Ann Robinson, were murdered in April 1996. They were discovered, bound and gagged, after neighbors contacted police regarding a foul odor coming from a house in Oak Park, a suburb of Detroit, Michigan. Police estimated that the bodies had been there for three weeks. The Ross family posted a $25,000 reward for any information related to the murders, but to date, the crime is unsolved. Diana Ross covered the song “I Want You” on her 2007 album
I Love You
.
Diana Ross once had a live-in relationship with
Gene Simmons of KISS.
Ross was a close friend and long time mentor of
Michael Jackson; she co-starred with him in the 1978 film version of the Broadway musical,
The Wiz (a remake of The Wizard of Oz). Jackson publicly stated he was in love with Ross and wanted to marry her. After Jackson's sudden death on June 25, 2009, Ross was named in his will as the custodian of his children in the event of the death of his mother,
Katherine Jackson.
[18] Ross was invited to speak at the memorial held in
Los Angeles on Tuesday July 7, 2009, but Ross declined via a letter that
Smokey Robinson read at the ceremony. Like Jackson's other close friends,
Elizabeth Taylor,
Quincy Jones, &
Liza Minnelli, Ross stated that she wanted to grieve in private.
In popular culture
Ross was portrayed by actress Samantha Kaine in the 2004
VH1 film
Man in the Mirror: The Michael Jackson Story
, a biopic about
Michael Jackson.
She was also portrayed by actress Holly Robinson-Peete in the 1992 television mini-series The Jacksons: An American Dream.
Solo discography
Top Ten singles
The following singles reached the Top Ten on either the United States
Billboard Hot 100 pop singles chart or the United Kingdom
UK Singles chart.
- 1970: "Ain't No Mountain High Enough" (US #1, UK #6)
- 1970: "Remember Me" (UK #7)
- 1971: "I'm Still Waiting" (UK #1)
- 1971: "Surrender" (UK #10)
- 1973: "Touch Me in the Morning"(US #1, UK #9)
- 1973: "All Of My Life" (UK #9)
- 1974: "You Are Everything" (with Marvin Gaye) (UK #5)
- 1975: "Theme From Mahogany (Do You Know Where You're Going To)" (US #1, UK #5)
- 1976: "Love Hangover" (US #1, UK #10)
- 1980: "Upside Down" (US #1, UK #2)
- 1980: "I'm Coming Out" (US #5)
- 1980: "My Old Piano" (UK #5)
- 1980: "It's My Turn" (US #9)
- 1981: "Endless Love" (with Lionel Richie) (US #1, UK #7)
- 1981: "Why Do Fools Fall in Love" (US #7, UK #4)
- 1982: "Mirror Mirror" (US #8)
- 1982: "Work That Body" (UK #7)
- 1982: "Muscles" (US #10)
- 1985: "Missing You" (US #10)
- 1986: "Chain Reaction" (UK #1)
- 1991: "When You Tell Me That You Love Me" (UK #2)
- 1992: "One Shining Moment" (UK #10)
- 1999: "Not Over You Yet" (UK #9)
- 2005: "When You Tell Me That You Love Me" (with Westlife) (UK #2)
Top Ten albums
The following albums reached the Top Ten on either the United States
albums chart or the United Kingdom pop albums chart.
- 1971: I'm Still Waiting
(a/k/a Surrender
) (UK #10)
- 1973: Lady Sings the Blues
(US #1)
- 1973: Touch Me in the Morning
(US #5; UK #7)
- 1973: Diana & Marvin
(with Marvin Gaye) (UK #6)
- 1976: Diana Ross
(US #5; UK #4)
- 1976: Greatest Hits 2
(UK #2)
- 1979: 20 Golden Greats
(UK #2)
- 1980: diana
(US #2)
- 1981: Endless Love
(US #9)
- 1982: Love Songs
(UK #5)
- 1983: Portrait
(UK #8)
- 1993: One Woman: The Ultimate Collection
(UK #1)
- 1995: Take Me Higher
(UK #10)
Filmography
- The T.A.M.I. Show
(1964) (w/ The Supremes)
- Beach Ball
(1965) (w/ The Supremes)
- Lady Sings the Blues
(1972)
- Mahogany
(1975)
- The Wiz
(1978)
- Double Platinum
(1999)
- The Making and Meaning of We Are Family
(2002) (documentary)
Television
- T.C.B.
(1968) (w/ The Supremes)
- G.I.T. on Broadway
(1969) (w/ The Supremes)
- Diana!
(1971)
- The Big Event: An Evening with Diana Ross
(1977)
- Diana Ross in Concert!
(1979)
- diana
(1981)
- Standing Room Only: Diana Ross
(1981)
- Motown 25: Yesterday, Today, Forever
(1983)
- For One And For All - Diana Ross Live! in Central Park
(1983)
- Diana Ross: Red Hot Rhythm and Blues
(1987)
- Diana Ross: Workin' Overtime
(1989)
- Diana Ross Live! The Lady Sings... Jazz & Blues: Stolen Moments
(1992)
- Out of Darkness
(1994)
- Super Bowl XXX
(1996)
- Double Platinum
(1999)
- VH1 Divas 2000: A Tribute to Diana Ross
(2000)
- Tsunami Aid: A Concert of Hope
(2005)
- BET Awards 2007
(2007)
- The Kennedy Center Honors
(2007)
- Nobel Peace Prize Concert
(2008)
Autobiographies
- (A scrapbook-style collection of photographs)
See also
- List of best selling music artists
- List of number-one hits (United States)
- List of artists who reached number one on the Hot 100 (U.S.)
- List of number-one dance hits (United States)
- List of artists who reached number one on the U.S. Dance chart
References
- [1]
- http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/chart_beat/bonus_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003872634
- Whitburn, Joel; ''The Billboard Book of Number 1 Hits'', p. 207
- Posner, Gerald. ''Motown : Music, Money, Sex, and Power,'' pg. 286.
- Wilson, Mary. ''Dreamgirl, My Life As A Supreme'' and Taraborrelli, Randy, "Call Her Miss Ross, George, Nelson " Where Did Our Love Go?, The Rise & Fall OF Motown
- Posner, Gerald. ''Motown : Music, Money, Sex, and Power,'' pg. 308 - 309. and Taraborrelli, Randy, "The Unauthorized Biography of Diana Ross.
- Wilson, Mary. ''Dreamgirl: My Life as a Supreme.'', pg. 1 - 5. Taken from Wilson, Mary and Romanowski, Patricia (1986, 1990, 2000). ''Dreamgirl & Supreme Faith: My Life as a Supreme''. New York: Cooper Square Publishers. ISBN 0-8154-1000-X.
- Anderson, Susan Heller and Deirdre Carmody (September 12, 1986). "NEW YORK DAY BY DAY; Start at Ross Playground." ''New York Times''. [1]
- "Diana Ross and Lil' Kim's wild VMA moment", Lisa Costantini, August 21, 2002, ''Entertainment Weekly''. Retrieved March 26, 2007.
- "Diana Ross: 'Mother's touch'", September 24, 1999, ''BBC News''. Retrieved March 26, 2007.
- Supremes return for tour. (Apr. 5, 2000). ''BBC News.'' Retrieved on December 28, 2006
- News 13 Newsroom. (Apr. 5, 2004). Ruling On Diana Ross's DUI. KOLD.com. Retrieved on October 13, 2007
- New Diana Ross Album To Get U.S. Release
- Diana Ross on Live with Regis and Kelly
- 2007 Tour: Diana Ross is divine in Oakland, California
- 2007 European Tour
- http://clubs.marist.edu/ski/
- Jackson shared bond with 'very dear friend Diana Ross'