Synopsis
Singer Celine Dion was born March 30, 1968, in Quebec, Canada. By the age of 18, Dion had recorded nine French albums and won numerous awards. She recorded her first English language album, Unison, in 1990. Dion's real breakthrough into pop music stardom came in 1992, when she recorded the theme to Disney's hit animated feature, Beauty and the Beast. The song became a No. 1 smash.
Canadian Star
Singer Celine Dion was born March 30, 1968, in Quebec, Canada. By the age of 18, Dion had recorded nine French albums and won numerous awards. She recorded her first English language album, Unison, in 1990. Dion's real breakthrough into pop music stardom came in 1992, when she recorded the theme to Disney's hit animated feature, Beauty and the Beast. The song became a No. 1 smash.
Canadian Star
Singer.
Born March 30, 1968, in Charlemagne, Quebec, Canada. The youngest of 14
children of Adhemar and Therese Dion, she grew up in a close-knit
musical family. Her parents formed a singing group, Dion's Family, which
toured Canada when Celine was still an infant. They later opened a
piano bar, where the five-year-old Celine would perform to the delight
of customers.
At
the age of 12, Dion recorded a demo tape of a song she had written with
her mother. They sent the tape to the manager and producer Rene
Angelil, who handled the career of the popular French singer Ginette
Reno. After hearing the tape and inviting Dion to perform for him in
person, Angelil signed her immediately under the condition that he would
have complete control over her career. He mortgaged his own home to
finance her debut album, La Voix du bon Dieu (The Voice of God).
By
the age of 18, Dion had recorded nine French albums and won numerous
Felix and Juno awards (the Canadian equivalent of the Grammy). In 1988,
she won the Eurovision Song Contest in Dublin, Ireland, and her
performance was broadcast live in countries throughout Europe, the
Middle East, Australia, and Japan. After this taste of international
acclaim, Dion began looking to the south, and American stardom. She
recorded her first English language album, Unison, in 1990.
Like most of her English language albums, it was a collaboration with
the songwriter-arranger-musician David Foster. Driven by the top-five
single "Where Does My Heart Beat Now," Unison sold over one
million copies worldwide. Dion's real breakthrough into pop music
stardom came in 1992, when she recorded the theme to Disney's hit
animated feature Beauty and the Beast, a duet with Peabo
Bryson. The song became a No. 1 smash, winning both a Grammy and an
Academy Award. It was featured on her second English album, Celine Dion,
which became her first gold record in the United States and sold more
than 12 million copies internationally. The undeniable success of her
self-titled effort, which also included her second No. 1 hit, "If You
Asked Me To," allowed Dion to launch her first headlining tour in the
United States.
Making it in America
Dion quickly capitalized on her newfound fame, releasing the top-selling The Colour of My Love
in 1993. The album showcased the romantic power ballads that Dion had
become known for, including "When I Fall in Love" (featured on the
soundtrack for the hit film Sleepless in Seattle), "The Power of Love," and "Because You Loved Me" (from the soundtrack to Robert Redford's sentimental Up Close and Personal).
In
1994, Dion happily merged her personal and professional life when she
and Angelil were married. Angelil, 26 years her senior, had divorced his
second wife during the 1980s, and he and Dion had begun a romantic
relationship shortly after she had turned 19. Engaged in 1991, the
couple tied the knot at Montreal's Notre Dame Basilica, in an elaborate
ceremony that was celebrated throughout Canada.
Dion's
international stardom was solidified by her performance of "The Power
of the Dream," at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta, Georgia. That same
year, Dion's Falling Into You won Grammy Awards for Album of
the Year and Best Pop Album. The next year, however, would hold even
greater glory for Dion with the release of the blockbuster film Titanic,
costarring Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet, for which Dion sang the
theme song, "My Heart Will Go On." By the time the film raked in a
record number of Oscar nominations (it won 11, including Best Song),
Dion's ballad had become ubiquitous on radio stations around the world.
Included on both the Titanic soundtrack album and Dion's own Let's Talk About Love, "My Heart Will Go On" propelled both to the No. 1 and No. 2 slots on Billboard's album charts and a combined 50 million records sold worldwide. Let's Talk About Love also featured collaborations with the likes of Barbra Streisand, Luciano Pavarotti, the Bee Gees, and Bryan Adams.
Canadian Diva
Dion
received the National Order of Quebec, her province's highest honor, in
April 1998. Later that year, she appeared alongside Aretha Franklin,
Mariah Carey, Gloria Estefan, and Shania Twain on the high-profile
televised concert Divas Live (1998) on VH-1. While touring relentlessly and recording several albums (including S'il Suffisait d'Aimer and a holiday album, These Are Special Times),
Dion was well rewarded at the Billboard Music Awards in late 1998,
where she won six awards including Album Artist of the Year and Album of
the Year for Let's Talk About Love. Her extensive 14-country
tour, which had begun in the summer of 1998, culminated in a gala
concert in Montreal on December 31, 1999, in honor of the new
millennium.
In
the first months of 2000, Dion announced that she was taking time off
from her career in order to focus on her family. She and Angelil had
been trying to have children for years, and eventually decided to use in
vitro fertilization to conceive. In May 2000, Dion underwent two small
operations at a fertility clinic in New York in order to improve her
chances of becoming pregnant. Her efforts were successful, and on
January 25, 2001, Dion gave birth to a boy, Rene-Charles. She has
revealed in interviews that she had stored another fertilized egg in the
fertility clinic and planned someday to give her son a sibling. She
announced she was pregnant with twins in 2010 and at age 42, Dion gave
birth to twin boys on October 23, 2010. Angelil, who was diagnosed with
skin cancer in 1999, is now in remission.
Lasting Legacy
After a two-year hiatus, Dion returned in March 2002 with A New Day Has Come,
which topped the charts in over 17 countries. A year later, she began a
much-hyped 36-month engagement at Caesars Palace, the famous Las Vegas
hotel and casino. Dion simultaneously released the album One Heart, which did not fair as strongly as its predecessor.
Dion returned to creating French-language albums with 2003's 1 Fille & 4 Types. Partnering with photographer Anne Geddes, she had a hit with the children's music album Miracle: A Celebration of New Life (2004). In 2007, Dion released two albums. Taking Chances nearly reached the top of the pop album charts, and D'Elles was another French-language recording.
While she no longer dominates the charts as she once did, Celine Dion remains a popular entertainer. Forbes
magazine reported in June 2009 that the singer earned approximately
$100 million in 2008, making her the second-highest earning musician on
the magazine's list after Madonna.
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