Aretha Louise Franklin (born March 25, 1942) is an
American singer, songwriter and pianist. Although known for her soul
recordings and referred to as the The Queen of Soul, Franklin is
adept at jazz, blues, R&B and gospel music. Rolling Stone magazine
ranked Franklin No. 1 on its list of The Greatest Singers of All
Time.[1][2][3][4]
Franklin is one of the most honored artists by the Grammy Awards,
with 18 competitive Grammys to date, and two honorary Grammys. She
has scored a total of 20 No. 1 singles on the Billboard R&B Singles
Chart, one of which also became her first No. 1 hit on the Billboard
Hot 100: "Respect" (1967). "I Knew You Were Waiting
(For Me)" (1987), a duet with George Michael, became her second
No. 1 on the latter chart. Since 1961, she has scored a total of
45 "Top 40" hits on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. She also
has the most million-selling singles of any female artist with 14.
Between 1967 and 1982 she had 10 #1 R&B albums - more than any
other female artist.
In 1987, Franklin became the first female artist to be inducted
into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.[5] She was the only featured
singer at the 2009 presidential inauguration of Barack Obama.
Aretha Louise Franklin was born at a two-room house in Memphis located
at 406 Lucy St.[6] She was the third of four children born to Barbara
(nèe Siggers) and C.L. Franklin and the fifth of six overall
in between past relationships by her parents. Franklin's family
moved to Buffalo, when Franklin was two, and then by four, had
settled in Detroit. Following the move to Detroit, Franklin's parents,
who had a troubled marriage, split. Due to her father's work as
a Baptist minister, Franklin was primarily raised by her grandmother,
Rachel. Franklin suffered a tragedy when her mother died in Buffalo
when Aretha was ten. Franklin sang in church at an early age and
learned how to play piano by ear. By her late preteens, Franklin
was regularly singing solo numbers in her father's New Bethel Baptist
Church. Franklin's father, C.L. (short for Clarence LaVaughn),
was a respected and popular preacher. Franklin grew up with local
and national celebrities hanging out at her father's home including
gospel greats Albertina Walker and her group The Caravans, Mahalia
Jackson and Clara Ward, three women who played a pivotal role in
her vocal development as a child.
After Franklin's father gained fame for his recorded sermons for
Checker Records and for gaining even more popularity for his work
as a civil rights activist, Franklin helped his daughter sign a contract
with Checker's JVB gospel record division and in 1956, at fourteen
released her first album, Songs of Faith. Franklin then toured the
gospel circuit and worked under the direction of James Cleveland.
Franklin's gospel career was short-lived after the singer became
a mother to two sons. After turning eighteen, Franklin set her sights
on a secular career, which her father gave his blessing. After turning
down offers from her city's fledgling Motown label and Sam Cooke's
request to join his RCA label, Franklin settled on Columbia Records
and moved to New York. Her first single, "Today I Sung the Blues",
was released in the fall of 1960 becoming a top ten R&B hit but
failed to enter the pop charts.
[edit] Early success: 1961-1966
Franklin's first album was released in January of 1961. Due to her
love of Dinah Washington, Franklin's label had the singer record
mainly jazz-influenced pop music hoping for success with this format
as the label had with Billie Holiday. Columbia founder John Hammond
later admitted in an interview years later that he felt Columbia
didn't really understand Franklin's background in gospel and failed
to bring that aspect out in her secular recordings. After scoring
two more top ten R&B hits with "Operation Heartbreak" and "Won't
Be Long" in 1961, Franklin scored her first top 40 pop hit with
her rendition of "Rock-A-Bye Your Baby With a Dixie Melody".
However later releases failed to find similar success, despite Franklin
having a near-top fifty hit with "Runnin' Out of Fools" in
1963.
After the release of a tribute album to Dinah Washington, Columbia
drifted away from their early jazz dreams for Franklin and had the
singer record renditions of girl group-oriented hits including "The
Shoop Shoop Song (It's In His Kiss)", "Every Little Bit
Hurts" and "Mockingbird" but every attempt to bring
her success with the material failed. Still, Franklin had already
gained a reputation for being a multi-talented vocalist and musician.
During a show in 1965, the master of ceremonies gave Franklin a tiara
crown declaring her "the queen of soul". The title would
prove to be prophetic. By 1966, struggling with recording for Columbia,
Franklin decided not to sign a new contract with the label and settled
with a deal with Atlantic. After she gained success in Atlantic,
Columbia would release material from Franklin's prior recordings
with the label which continued until 1969.
[edit] Superstardom: 1967-1972
Franklin began recording her first songs for Atlantic in early 1967.
Initially sent to Muscle Shoals's legendary FAME studios where the
Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section was the in-house band, Franklin cut
her first song - the blues ballad "I Never Loved a Man (The
Way I Love You)", which finally allowed Franklin to show her
gospel side. Tensions between Franklin's then-husband and then-manager
Ted White and a musician led to Franklin and White hiding from public
view in New York. Franklin eventually returned to the studio in New
York to record the b-side, the gospel-oriented "Do Right Woman". "I
Never Loved a Man" soared up both the pop and R&B charts
upon its release peaking at number-nine and number-one respectively.
Her second single with Atlantic would also be her biggest, most acclaimed
work. "Respect", originally recorded and written by R&B
singer Otis Redding, would become a bigger hit after Franklin's gospel-fueled
rendition of the song. The song also started a pattern of Franklin
in later songs during this period producing a call and response vocal
with Franklin usually backed up by her sisters Erma and Carolyn Franklin
or The Sweet Inspirations. Franklin is credited with arranging the
background vocals and ad-libbing the line, "r-e-s-p-e-c-t, find
out what it means to me/take care of TCB", while her sisters
shouted afterwards, "sock it to me". Franklin's version
peaked at number one on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming a sixties
anthem. Franklin had three more top ten hits in 1967 - "Baby
I Love You", "(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman" and "Chain
of Fools". "Respect" later won Franklin her first
two Grammys. She eventually won eight consecutive Grammys under the
Best Female R&B Vocal Performance category.[7]
By the end of the year, Franklin not only became a superstar but
she stood as one of the symbols of the civil rights movement partially
due to her rendition of "Respect", which had a feminist-powered
theme after Franklin recorded it. Franklin's other hits during the
late sixties included "Think", her rendition of Dionne
Warwick's "I Say a Little Prayer", "Ain't No Way" and "The
House That Jack Built" among others. By the end of the sixties,
Franklin's title as "the queen of soul" became permanent
in the eyes of the media. After a few struggles in 1969, she returned
with the ballad, "Call Me" in January 1970. That same year
she had another hit with her gospel version of Ben E. King's "Don't
Play That Song", while in 1971, Franklin was one of the first
black performers to headline Fillmore West[8] where she later released
a live album. That same year she released the acclaimed Young, Gifted & Black
album, which featured two top ten hits, the ballad "Daydreamin'" and
the funk-oriented "Rocksteady". In 1972, she released her
first gospel album in nearly two decades with Amazing Grace. The
album eventually became her biggest-selling release ever, selling
over two million copies and becoming the best-selling gospel album
of all time.
[edit] Decline and fallout with Atlantic: 1973-1979
Aretha had another number-one R&B hit in 1973 with the Carolyn
Franklin and William "Sonny" Sanders-composed "Angel",
however its parent album, Hey Now Hey (The Other Side of the Sky),
failed to repeat the success of Franklin's other albums. By 1974,
after four years performing in Afrocentric-styled clothing, the singer
glammed up her look and styled red hair releasing Let Me In Your
Life. The album yielded the smash single, "Until You Come Back
to Me (That's What I'm Gonna Do)". While several singles would
later find success on the R&B charts, Franklin was losing favor
with pop audiences as soul music was starting to be overtaken by
the emerging disco genre. Atlantic Records had also by this point
given priority attention to Roberta Flack, leading to relations between
Franklin and the company becoming estranged as a result. Franklin
turned down a number of tracks giving to her by Marvin Yancy and
Chuck Jackson (though eventually they would contribute to her 1975
album, You). Several of the songs including "This Will Be (An
Everlasting Love)" was later recorded by Natalie Cole. After
the arrivals of Cole and Chaka Khan, Franklin's star ebbed in the
public though she was still revered.
Franklin briefly returned to the top 40 in 1976 with the Curtis
Mayfield production, Sparkle, which spawned the number-one R&B
hit, "Giving Him Something He Can Feel". Despite this,
Franklin struggled to find success with subsequent releases. After
the release of 1979's La Diva, an attempt for Franklin to find a
disco audience that flopped, Franklin decided to end her contract
with Atlantic. While performing in Las Vegas in June 1979, Franklin's
father, C.L., was shot during an attempted robbery at his LaSalle
Street home in Detroit. The incident left C.L. in a coma for the
next five years. Franklin would move back to the Detroit area in
late 1982 from Los Angeles (where she had moved to in 1976) to assist
with care of her father in Detroit.
[edit] Comeback: 1980-1989
In 1980, Franklin among other prominent rhythm and blues and soul
artists including Ray Charles and James Brown appeared on the film,
The Blues Brothers. Franklin gained notice for her portrayal of the
concerned wife of musician Matt "Guitar" Murphy and engaged
in a brief war of words with Dan Aykroyd and John Belushi before
going into "Think". Following that performance, Clive Davis
signed Franklin to his Arista Records imprint. The singles "United
Together" and the George Benson-featured "Love All the
Hurt Away" returned Franklin to the R&B top ten while 1982's
Jump to It, featuring a contemporary R&B production style by
Luther Vandross, became a comeback of sorts for Franklin on the pop
music chart. The album stayed at #1 on the R&B Albums chart for
seven weeks and crossed to #23 on the Billboard 200 album chart,
selling over 600,000 units and becoming Aretha's first gold-certified
album since the Sparkle soundtrack. The title track became Franklin's
first number-one R&B hit in five years while also hitting #24
on the Hot 100. After the relative failure of her 1983 follow-up,
Get It Right, also produced by Vandross, Franklin took some personal
time off. Following the July 1984 death of her father, Aretha entered
the United Sound Studios in Detroit to record a new album for Arista
in October of that year. Inspired by the recent success of fellow
artist Tina Turner and Arista's emerging star Whitney Houston, Arista
paired Franklin with Narada Michael Walden.
The album released in July 1985, Who's Zoomin' Who?, featured R&B,
pop, dance, synthpop and rock elements and became Franklin's first
platinum-certified success. The album launched several major hits
including the title track and the Motown-inspired "Freeway of
Love". The rock-influenced Annie Lennox duet, "Sisters
Are Doin' It for Themselves" also became a hit for Franklin
on the pop charts though it failed to climb higher than #66 on the
R&B chart due to its more pop rock-leaning sound. Music Videos
for each of the singles became prominent fixtures on MTV, BET and
VH-1 among other video channels. In 1986, Franklin released her self-titled
follow-up to Who's Zoomin' Who. The album sold close to a million
copies and featured the number-one hit, "I Knew You Were Waiting
for Me", a duet with George Michael. The song became Franklin's
first single since "Respect" nearly 20 years back to hit
number-one on the Hot 100. Other hits from the album included a cover
of "Jumpin' Jack Flash" and another Motown-inspired hit, "Jimmy
Lee". A year later, Franklin returned to her gospel roots with
the album, One Lord, One Faith, One Baptism, which failed to repeat
the success of Amazing Grace despite a powerful rendition of "Oh
Happy Day", featuring Mavis Staples, but did reach the Top 10
of Billboard's gospel albums chart.
[edit] Later work: 1989-2003
In 1989, Franklin returned with her first pop album in three years
with Through the Storm but despite scoring a Top 20 hit with the
title track featuring Elton John and the presence of Whitney Houston
in their duet single, "It Isn't, It Wasn't, It Ain't Ever Gonna
Be", the album tanked, as did a follow-up, 1991's poorly-arranged
and produced new jack swing effort, What You See Is What You Sweat.
After singing Donny Hathaway's "Someday We'll All Be Free" on
the Malcolm X soundtrack in 1992 and singing at then-President Bill
Clinton's inauguration ceremony in 1993, Franklin returned to favor
with pop audiences later in 1993 with the release of the dance single, "Deeper
Love", which was featured on the soundtrack of Sister Act 2:
Back in the Habit. The following year, Franklin issued her Arista
hits album and with Babyface released two hit singles, "Honey" and
the top 40 pop ballad "Willing to Forgive". In 1995, her
song "It Hurts Like Hell" appeared on the soundtrack for
the movie Waiting to Exhale. Four years passed until Franklin released
another album. 1998's A Rose Is Still a Rose reintroduced Franklin
to a new R&B audience and featured elements of neo soul and hip
hop soul with production from Lauryn Hill, Jermaine Dupri and Sean "Puffy" Combs.
The title track, written and produced by Hill, became Franklin's
biggest hit in years reaching number 26 on the Hot 100 and reaching
the R&B top five. That same year, with less than 30 minutes [9]
to prepare, Franklin stepped in for the late Luciano Pavarotti to
sing "Nessun Dorma" at the 1998 Grammy Awards. (Pavarotti,
who was awarded a Lifetime Achievement Award that night, was too
sick to attend.) She gave a soulful and highly improvised performance
in the aria's original key, while firmly stamping out the year with
a captivating performance during VH1's "Divas Live" telecast.
Franklin later reprised her role as Matt "Guitar" Murphy's
wife in the Blues Brothers remake, Blues Brothers 2000 singing "Respect".
Franklin struggled to record a successful follow-up, however, and
it would be five more years before a new album emerged. Franklin
issued her next album, So Damn Happy, in 2003. Despite sales failure,
the album spawned the Grammy-winning song, "Wonderful" in
the Best Traditional R&B Vocal Performance category.
[edit] Current work: 2004-present
In 2003, after 23 years with Arista, Franklin parted with the company
and decided to go on the independent route. Her own label, Aretha
Records, formed in 2005 but no albums have been issued from the label.
Franklin released a duets compilation album, Jewels in the Crown:
All-Star Duets with the Queen, in 2007. The album featured the Fantasia
duet, "Put You Up on Game", which despite becoming a hit
on Urban AC radio, stalled at number 41 on the R&B charts. A
year later, Franklin issued her first holiday album, This Christmas,
Aretha. After initially being released as a Borders exclusive, it
was later released by the DMI label. In 2006 Aretha announced the
upcoming release of her next album, A Woman Falling Out of Love on
her label. However, release dates for the album have been scheduled
and delayed numerous times. Franklin said she recorded duets for
the album with gospel singer Karen Clark Sheard as well as pop-rock
superstar Richard Marx and country artist Faith Hill. In 2008, Franklin
was honored as MusiCares "Person of the Year," two days
prior to the 50th Annual Grammy Awards, where she was awarded her
18th career Grammy. Franklin was personally asked by then newly-elected
President Barack Obama to perform at his inauguration singing "My
Country 'tis of Thee". The memorable hat she wore at the ceremony
was donated to the Smithsonian Institution.[10][dead link] In 2010,
Franklin received an honorary music degree from Yale University.[11]
[edit] Personal life
Franklin's sons Clarence and Edward were born when she was 13 and
16 years old, respectively.[12] She has never identified the father
of either child. Aretha's grandmother, Rachel, raised Aretha's sons
while she pursued her singing career. Rachel lived in a guest house
behind C. L. Franklin's LaSalle Street home. The Franklin family
moved from their home on Boston Street in Detroit's North End section
to LaSalle Street during the late 1950s.
Against her father's wishes Aretha began dating a family acquaintance
named Ted White. In 1961 they were quickly married in Ohio by a judge.
White became her personal manager as well as co-writer. Shortly afterward,
Aretha purchased a house on Sorrento Avenue in northwest Detroit,
where she resided for the next decade. Their son, Ted White Jr.,
was born in 1964. Aretha and Ted divorced in 1969. Teddy is her musical
director and guitarist of her touring band. From 1969 until 1976,
Franklin had a seven-year relationship with her road manager Ken
Cunningham. In the early 1970s the couple moved from Detroit to New
York City, at which time Aretha's grandmother moved into her Sorrento
Avenue home. Their son Kecalf (from the initials of his parents'
names: Kenneth E Cunningham Aretha Louise Franklin and pronounced "kelf")[13]
was born on March 28, 1970.
In 1978, Aretha married actor Glynn Turman at her father's New Bethel
Baptist Church in Detroit. C. L. Franklin performed the marriage
ceremony. The couple returned to their home in Encino, California.
In late 1982 Franklin moved back to Detroit where she currently resides.
Turman and Franklin divorced in early 1984. The couple didn't have
children during their short-term marriage. They remained friends
and she sang the theme song for his show A Different World in the
late 1980s. While White is 11 years older than Franklin, Cunningham
and Turman are both several years her junior.
Franklin's two youngest sons, Ted White Jr. and Kecalf Cunningham,
are active in the music business. Teddy has been a guitarist in Aretha's
back up band since the late 1980s while Kecalf has been working in
the industry as a Christian hip-hop rapper and producer.
Aretha's parents are both deceased, as are her sisters Erma and
Carolyn and brothers Cecil and Vaughn (citation needed). Her only
surviving sibling is half-sister Carl Ellan Kelley (née Jennings;
born in 1940), C.L. Franklin's daughter by Mildred Jennings, a then
13 year old congregant of New Salem Baptist Church of Memphis, Tennessee,
where C.L. was pastor in the late 1930s and early 1940s.[14] Brother
Vaughn (Barbara Franklin's son from a relationship before her marriage
to C. L.) died of lung cancer at the age of 75 (citation needed).
Aretha is a Democrat. [15]
In September 2010, Franklin's second eldest son Edward Franklin
was attacked by three people while at a gas station on Joy Road in
northwest Detroit.[16] In November 2010, Franklin's doctor ordered
the ailing singer to not perform until May 2011.
Due to her long-term friendship with Cissy Houston during Houston's
time with The Sweet Inspirations who sang background on several of
Franklin's songs, Aretha became a godmother to Whitney Houston in
the late 1960s. Houston sang the operatic soprano whoop in the background
of Franklin's "Ain't No Way".
[edit] Awards and achievements
Aretha Franklin wipes a tear after being honored with the Presidential
Medal of Freedom on November 9, 2005, at the White House. Seated
with her are fellow recipients Robert Conquest, left, and Alan Greenspan
* On June 28, 1968 she became the second African-American woman
to appear on the cover of Time magazine
* In 1985, then-Gov. James Blanchard of Michigan declared her voice “a
natural resource” during a ceremony that marked her 25 years in show
business.
* Aretha Franklin is one of three musicians, along with Madonna & Marvin
Gaye, to achieve each of the top 10 positions on the US Billboard Hot 100.
* On January 20, 1987, she became the first woman to be inducted into the Rock
and Roll Hall of Fame.
* On March 29, 1987, Franklin sang "America the Beautiful" at WrestleMania
III.
* In 1987, she was awarded an honorary Doctor of Musicology degree from the
University of Detroit.[citation needed]
* In 1994 she became the recipient of a Kennedy Center Honor.
* In September, 1999, she was awarded The National Medal of Arts by President
Clinton.
* In 2004, Rolling Stone ranked her No. 9 on their list of the 100 Greatest
Artists of All Time.[17]
* In 2005, she was awarded The Presidential Medal of Freedom by President George
W. Bush.
* In 2005, she became the second woman (Madonna being the first, a founding
member) to be inducted into the UK Music Hall of Fame.
* In 2005, Franklin was inducted into the Michigan Rock and Roll Legends Hall
of Fame.
* On February 6, 2006, she performed, along with Aaron Neville, "The Star-Spangled
Banner" at Super Bowl XL.
* On May 13, 2006, she was presented with an honorary Doctor of Music degree
by the Berklee College of Music.
* On April 1, 2007 Aretha sang "America the Beautiful" at WrestleMania
23.
* On May 14, 2007, she was presented with an honorary Doctor of Music degree
from the University of Pennsylvania.
* In 2007, Aretha Franklin's recording of "Respect" was voted a Legendary
Michigan Song.
* Is an honorary member of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc.
* On February 8, 2008, Franklin was honored as MusiCares "Person of the
Year."
* On February 14, 2008, Franklin was given the Vanguard award at the NAACP
Image awards.
* On May 4, 2008, Franklin was given the Key to the City of Memphis at the
2008 "Memphis in May International Music Festival" by Mayor Dr. Willie
Herenton during her performance onstage.
* On September 13, 2008, Franklin was ranked No .19 on the Billboard Hot 100
All-Time Top Artists list by Billboard.[18]
* November 2008, Franklin was named by Rolling Stone as the No. 1 all-time
best singer of the rock era, according to the magazine's survey of 179 musicians,
producers, Rolling Stone editors, and other music industry insiders.[19]
* On January 20, 2009, Franklin performed "My Country, 'Tis of Thee" during
the inauguration ceremony of Barack Obama. The distinctive hat she wore during
that performance is displayed at the Smithsonian.[10]
* On May 23, 2010, Franklin received an Honorary Doctorate in Music from Yale
University.[20]
[edit] Grammy Awards
Franklin has won eighteen Grammy Awards in total during her nearly
half-century long career (she first charted in 1961) and holds the
record for most Best Female R&B Vocal Performance awards with
eleven to her name (including eight consecutive awards from 1968
to 1975 — the first eight awarded in that category).
Aretha Franklin's 18 Grammy Award Wins
# Year Category Genre Title
1 1968 Best Rhythm & Blues Recording R&B Respect
2 1968 Best Female R&B Vocal Performance R&B Respect
3 1969 Best Female R&B Vocal Performance R&B Chain Of Fools
4 1970 Best Female R&B Vocal Performance R&B Share Your Love
With Me
5 1971 Best Female R&B Vocal Performance R&B Don't Play That
Song For Me
6 1972 Best Female R&B Vocal Performance R&B Bridge Over
Troubled Water
7 1973 Best Female R&B Vocal Performance R&B Young, Gifted
and Black (album)
8 1973 Best Soul Gospel Performance Gospel Amazing Grace (album)
9 1974 Best Female R&B Vocal Performance R&B Master Of Eyes
10 1975 Best Female R&B Vocal Performance R&B Ain't Nothing
Like The Real Thing
11 1982 Best Female R&B Vocal Performance R&B Hold On...I'm
Comin' (album track)
12 1986 Best Female R&B Vocal Performance R&B Freeway Of
Love
13 1988 Best Female R&B Vocal Performance R&B Aretha (album)
14 1988 Best R&B Performance - Duo Or Group with Vocals R&B
I Knew You Were Waiting (For Me) (with George Michael)
15 1989 Best Soul Gospel Performance - Female Gospel One Lord, One
Faith, One Baptism (album)
* 1991 Living Legend Award Special
* 1994 Lifetime Achievement Award Special
16 2004 Best Traditional R&B Vocal Performance R&B Wonderful
17 2006 Best Traditional R&B Vocal Performance R&B A House
Is Not A Home
18 2008 Best Gospel-Soul Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group Gospel
Never Gonna Break My Faith (with Mary J. Blige)
*According to NARAS Rules: 'Special' Grammy Awards (such as Lifetime
Achievement) are not counted in a performer's tally.
[edit] Discography
Further information: Aretha Franklin discography
[edit] Top 10 US Hot 100 singles
Year Title Peak
1967 "I Never Loved a Man (The Way I Love You)" 9
1967 "Respect" 1
1967 "Baby I Love You" 4
1967 "(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman" 8
1967 "Chain of Fools" 2
1968 "(Sweet Sweet Baby) Since You've Been Gone" 5
1968 "Think" 7
1968 "The House That Jack Built" 6
1968 "I Say a Little Prayer" 10
1971 "Bridge Over Troubled Water" / "Brand New Me" 6
1971 "Spanish Harlem" 2
1971 "Rock Steady" 9
1972 "Day Dreaming" 5
1973 "Until You Come Back to Me (That's What I'm Gonna Do)" 3
1985 "Freeway of Love" 3
1985 "Who's Zoomin' Who" 7
1987 "I Knew You Were Waiting (For Me)" (with George Michael)
1
Source:[21]
[edit] Filmography
[edit] Movies
* The Blues Brothers (1980)
* Motown 40: The Music Is Forever (1998) (ABC-TV documentary)
* Blues Brothers 2000 (1998)
* DIVAS LIVE (1998)
* Immaculate Funk (2000) (documentary)
* Rhythm, Love and Soul (2002)
* Tom Dowd & the Language of Music (2003) (documentary)
* Singing in the Shadow: The Children of Rock Royalty (2003) (documentary)
* From The Heart / The Four Tops 50th Anniversary and Celebration (2004)
* Atlantic Records: The House that Ahmet Built (2007) (documentary)
[edit] Television
* Solid Gold (numerous appearances with the last in 1982 performing "Jump
To It")
* Kelly & Company (Marilyn Turner and John Kelly) (Detroit)
* Dayna (Dayna Eubanks, fomer Detroit newscaster)
* Rolonda Show (Rolonda Watts)
* The Oprah Winfrey Show (numerous appearances including Oprah's 40th birthday,
with Patti LaBelle and Gladys Knight)
* Live with Regis and Kelly (numerous appearances)
* The View