Cher
Born Cherilyn LaPiere Sarkisian on May 20,
1946, in El Centro, California. Cher
met Sonny Bono, a recorder producer, in
a coffee shop when she was sixteen. The
two began performing together as a
musical act, at one point billing themselves
as "Caesar and Cleo." They
married when Cher was eighteen and by 1965, Sonny
and Cher were a popular act
on the West Coast, renowned for their outrageous
outfits. Their first big hit
was "I Got You, Babe," (1965) which sold over
four million copies. The couple
had a daughter, Chastity Bono, in 1969. In the
1970s, they starred in
their own top-rated television variety show: The Sonny
and Cher Comedy Hour
(1971-1974). The end of their show coincided with the
collapse of their
marriage. The couple divorced in 1974, but reunited
professionally for The
Sonny and Cher Show (1976-1977). Bono went on to become a
Republican
congressman before his death in a ski accident in 1998. Cher had a
brief
marriage to rock musician Gregg Allman in the late 1970s, which produced
a
son, Elijah Blue Allman. After a stint on the Las Vegas circuit in the
late
1970s/early 1980s, Cher launched a successful film career. She
received a Best
Supporting Actress Oscar nomination for her role in
Silkwood (1983), and a Best
Actress Academy Award for Moonstruck (1987),
in which she played an Italian
widow. Her other notable movies include: Mask
(1985), Suspect (1987), Witches of
Eastwick (1987), Mermaids (1990), and
Tea With Mussolini. In 1996, Cher made her
directorial debut with one segment
of HBO's three-part film, If These Walls
Could Talk. She is the author of
several beauty and fitness books, as well as an
autobiographical work, The
First Time (1998). Cher also released two
"Cherfitness" videos, in 1991
and 1992. In 1999, Cher found success again on
the pop-music charts with her
album Believe, released in late 1998. Her smash
single, a neo-disco anthem
also titled "Believe" made her, at age 52, the
oldest American woman ever to
record a No. 1 hit. Her sold-out tour began in
June 1999. In early 2000,
Cher overwhelmed the competition at the Grammy Awards,
beating out fellow
divas Jennifer Lopez, Gloria Estefan, and Donna Summer for
Best Dance
Recording, and winning her first Grammy, for "Believe".