Shania
Twain was born Eileen Edwards in Canada on
Aug. 28, 1965, the second oldest of five siblings. She was raised
in Timmins, Ontario, about
500 miles due north of Toronto, where her stepfather, an Ojibway
Indian named Jerry Twain, and mother,Sharon, had both been raised. It was a proud but, at times, impoverished
existence. They struggled to keep enough food in the cupboards, but
there was always an abundance of music in the household.
Shania Twain often grabbed
a guitar and retreated to the solitude of her bedroom singing and
writing until her fingers
ached. "I grew
up listening to Waylon, Willie, Dolly, Tammy, all of them," she
recalls. "But we also listened to the Mamas and the Papas, The
Carpenters, The Supremes and Stevie Wonder. The many different styles
of music I was exposed to as a child not only influenced my vocal
style, but even more so, my writing style." Her mom noticed
Twain's talents, and soon the youngster was being shuttled to radio
and TV studios, community centers, senior citizens' homes, "everywhere
they could get me booked." An 8-year-old Twain was often pulled
out of bed to sing with the house band at a local club but only after
alcohol sales ended at midnight. Later, Twain spent summers working
with her stepfather as the foreman of a dozen-man reforestation crew
in
the Canadian bush, where she learned to wield an axe and handle a
chain saw as well as any man. In the winter season, she would sing
in clubs and do television and radio performances as often as her
schooling would
allow.
In 1987, at age 21, Twain lost her parents
in an automobile accident. She took on the responsibility of raising
her three younger siblings.
She managed to keep the household going with a job at Ontario's Deerhurst
Resort, which not only provided for her new family responsibilities
but also gave her an education in every aspect of theatrical performance,
from musical comedy to Andrew Lloyd Webber to Gershwin. Three years
later, with her brothers grown enough to take care of themselves,
Twain was on her own. Shedding her real name, Eileen, she adopted
the Ojibway name of Shania, meaning "I'm on my way." Twain
recorded a demo tape of original music and set her sights on Nashville.
Although Shania Twain landed
a record deal with Mercury Records on the basis of her original material,
her self-titled
1993 debut album
featured only one of her songs, the feisty "God Ain't Gonna
Getcha for That." Singles "What Made You Say That" and "Dance
With the One That Brought You" each peaked at No. 55 on the
Billboard country singles chart. It took a phone call from a distant
admirer, rock producer Robert John "Mutt" Lange (AD/DC,
Def Leppard, Foreigner, Bryan Adams and many more) for Twain to find
a true believer, both in her voice and her original songs. Twain
and Lange met face to face in Nashville at Fan Fair in 1993 and married
six months later, by which time they'd written half an album's worth
of tunes together. As 1994 unfolded, they traveled and wrote their
way across the United States, Canada, England, Spain, Italy and the
Caribbean. They began to lay down basic tracks for a new album in
Nashville, later recording overdubs and mixing in Quebec. The first
results of their labor, "Whose Bed Have Your Boots
Been Under," entered the Billboard country singles chart in
January 1995, peaking at No. 11. Twain's second album, The Woman
in Me, debuted on the country albums chart the following month. The
collection has sold 18 million copies, making Twain the best-selling
country female artist of all time. The single "Any Man of Mine," hit
the charts in May and became the first of four consecutive No. 1
hits for Twain, including "(If You're Not in It for Love) I'm
Outta Here!," "You Win My Love" and "No One Needs
to Know." The project won a Grammy for country album of the
year and was named album of the year by the Academy of Country Music
in 1995.
Twain's third Mercury collection, Come on
Over, was released in 1997, two years after her last album. The
project continued Twain's
hot streak, producing No. 1 hits "Honey, I'm Home" and "Love
Gets Me Every Time." The sultry ballad "You're Still the
One" went to No. 1 on the country singles chart and made it
to No. 2 on Billboard's Hot 100 pop chart, solidifying Twain as a
crossover artist. The sassy "Man! I Feel Like a Woman," a
Top 5 country hit, helped secure the singer a contract with cosmetics
company Revlon, which used the tune in TV ads featuring Twain. Come
on Over has sold 11 million copies to date.
While The Woman in Me broke records and made
Twain an international star, critics didn't know what to make of
her sexy image and independent
approach to marketing her music. Instead of touring to promote the
record, Twain made a series of sexy videos, one of which was shot
on location in Egypt. The singer finally mounted her first major
tour in 1998 following the release of Come on Over. The highly anticipated
outing helped earn Twain entertainer of the year trophies from the
ACM and the Country Music Association in 1999. Twain has won Grammys
for best country song ("Come on Over" and "You're
Still the One") and for best country female vocal performance
("Man! I Feel Like a Woman!" and "You're Still the
One"). She also has taken home trophies from the Canadian Country
Music Awards, Canada's JUNO Awards and the American Music Awards.
In 1999, Broadcast Music, Inc. (BMI) named Twain both country songwriter
of the year and pop songwriter of the year. "You're Still the
One" was named BMI's country and pop song of the year.
At the top of her game, Shania
Twain retreated
to her home in Switzerland with her husband at the end of 1999. She
and Lange welcomed their
first child together in the summer of 2001 while preparing her 2002
release Up!, featuring the hits "I'm Gonna Getcha Good" and "Forever
and For Always." Twain released a Greatest
Hits album in 2004, which included a duet with Billy Currington, "Party
For Two."
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