
Concert • Record • Artist • Promotion • Since 1986
Vanessa Williams

Vanessa Williams pictured with concert promoter Darrin McGillis
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Vanessa Williams with her family receiving a Hollywood star
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Vanessa Williams - at the
beginning of her career was known chiefly as the Miss America pageant
winner who'd been forced to renounce her title for posing in Penthouse
magazine. Williams not only put the scandal behind her, she all but
obliterated it, turning out a series of slick, sophisticated hits that
made her one of the most popular adult contemporary R&B singers of her
time. In addition to her broad crossover appeal, she established a
parallel acting career in both film and television, ending the '90s as a
highly successful all-around entertainer.
Vanessa Lynn Williams was born March 18, 1963, in the upstate New York
town of Millwood to parents who were both music teachers. She loved
performing musical theater as a teenager, and won a scholarship to study
it at Syracuse University in 1981. In the meantime, she began entering
beauty pageants, with considerable success; in 1983, she represented New
York in the Miss America pageant and became the first African-American
woman ever to be crowned the winner. Unfortunately, her triumph was
short-lived. Williams had posed for a series of nude photos for
Penthouse prior to her historic victory, and when the magazine published
them in 1984, the ensuing scandal forced her to resign as Miss America.
Undaunted, Williams began to pursue her first love, singing; she backed
George Clinton on his 1986 album R&B Skeletons in the Closet, including
the single "Do Fries Go With That Shake?" Williams also returned to
acting, making her feature film debut with a small role in The Pickup
Artist in 1987; the same year, she married her manager, Ramon Harvey.
All the renewed exposure eventually helped land her a record deal with
Mercury/Polygram subsidiary Wing.
Williams' debut album, The Right Stuff, was released in 1988, featuring
a mix of urban dance-pop and adult contemporary balladry. The title
track was a decent-sized hit, and the ballad "Dreamin'" became Williams'
first Top Ten single, going all the way to number one on the R&B charts.
The Right Stuff went gold, and Williams subsequently appeared in several
TV movies. Her 1991 sophomore set The Comfort Zone was a star-maker; it
spawned another R&B chart-topper in "Running Back to You," but the real
story was the ballad "Save the Best for Last," a ubiquitous
across-the-board smash that became Williams' first number one hit on the
pop charts. The title track solidified Williams' growing reputation for
smooth, sexy adult pop, and the album went on to sell over two million
copies. In 1993, Williams' duet with Brian McKnight, "Love Is," became
another huge hit when it was featured on the soundtrack of Beverly Hills
90210.
In 1994, Williams returned to her roots by accepting her first starring
role on Broadway, taking over the lead in Kiss of the Spider Woman; she
also appeared on a re-recorded version of the cast album. Late that
year, she also released her third album, The Sweetest Days, which found
her branching out into jazzy pop and torch songs in addition to her
usual urban and adult contemporary fare. It also featured material by
Babyface and Sting, and its upscale, sophisticated ambience gave
Williams her second platinum album. In 1995, Williams was tabbed to sing
the commercial version of "Colors of the Wind," the theme to the Disney
film Pocahontas; not only was it a huge hit, it also won an Academy
Award. 1996 brought a divorce from manager Harvey and the holiday album
Star Bright; most notably, Williams landed her biggest feature film role
to date when she starred opposite Arnold Schwarzenegger in that year's
Eraser, and she followed it with an appearance in the ensemble drama
Soul Food in 1997. 1997 also brought her fourth proper album, Next,
which didn't attract quite as much attention as its predecessors. After
the release of Greatest Hits: The First Ten Years in late 1998, Williams
remained relatively quiet on the musical front, save for the occasional
live performance event; she concentrated more on her acting career, and
was prominently featured in Dance With Me (1998), Light It Up (1999),
and the remake of Shaft (2000). In 1999, Williams remarried to L.A.
Lakers basketball player Rick Fox.
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